Listening to Electroacoustic
Music, Reading Responses
Chapter 5 - Analytical Methodologies:
Composer and music theorist James Tenney points out that by the 1960s
there is a gulf between the conceptual framework of 20th-century music
theory and musical practice, a gap which is particularly evident with
electroacoustic music:
... the disparity between the traditional concepts and the actual
musical "object" becomes even greater with the more recent
(non-instrumental) electronic and tape-music. But even here, the problem
is not really one of a lack of familiarity, but of a nearly complete
[disjunction] between music theory and musical practice. Thus, even when
the novelties of the various styles and techniques of 20th-century music
have become thoroughly familiar, certain "complexities" will still remain
outside of our present conceptual framework, and it is clear that this
conceptual framework is in need of expansion (Tenney (1961)1992: 4). While
Tenney originally expressed his concerns about the conceptual framework of
contemporary music theory in 1961, I believe that his statement still
holds true in general.1 Very few electroacoustic works have been described
in detail, and still fewer from a listener's perspective. More
importantly, perhaps, there remains a prevailing attitude that listening
is not a suitable basis for musical analysis of such works. This attitude
is evident in an article entitled "The Analysis of Electronic Music," by
Marco Stroppa. Writing in 1984, he says that although hundreds of
electroacoustic works existed at that time, he could find no specific
analyses:
One might have expected such a wealth of pieces to have stimulated
major theoretical comment, as was the case with instrumental music in the
period after 1950. But the landscape of thought and criticism is
surprisingly barren.... If we count specifically examples of musical
analysis, the number is reduced simply ... to zero. (1984: 176)2 Stroppa
discusses the difficulties he encounters in attempting to analyze
Jean-Claude Risset's Songes for tape. He notes the absence of a written
score: while composers often produce schematic representations of the
work, they are often, in Stroppa's view, "crude and approximate,
particularly in comparison with the complexity and perfection of
traditional notation" (1984: 177).
The alternative, he decides, is listening. Yet he does not trust this
either:
Perception fanatics seem to suggest another, radically different
approach. "Let's get rid of the written text, and think more about what
happens to our ears!" they say. Perhaps they are right, but then they must
be prepared to limit themselves to the discovery of a few superficial
features, a few oppositions of contrast, and little else. Unfortunately,
perception, as it passes through the sieve of our auditive system, is an
extremely variable personal phenomenon. For the same sound stimulus,
everyone has a different perception and reaction. It seems difficult,
therefore, to establish common, objective elements on such changeable
bases. (1984: 179) As a result of this apparent impossibility of reading
or listening, Stroppa concludes that works for tape alone are "at present
impossible to transcribe and analyse and in this case we can only be sure
of a relative and superficial analytical understanding" (1984: 180). He is
making this claim on the basis of a number of assumptions that I do not
share. He suggests that one has to choose between listening and using a
written text. Theorists such as Tenney who are interested in auditory
perception do not suggest getting rid of the written text, but instead
using it as only one strategy in the analytical process, which is based on
listening as well as reading whatever is available. Mixing scores and
composers' transcriptions do not give all necessary information, but then
neither does any score,3 as Stroppa admits. More importantly, close and
repeated listening does not limit the analyst to superficial features:
each time the analyst listens, increased depth is possible. Stroppa
emphasizes the subjectivity of listening, giving objective and therefore
privileged status to the written score. While variations exist in
listeners' perceptions of sound, they also exist in what people read in a
score.
Tenney's approach to music analysis, as elaborated in Meta+Hodos
(1992), seems important to me in its focus on listening intently to the
work, and in its equal consideration of the musical parameters of pitch,
loudness, timbre, duration, temporal density (the number of successive
elements in a particular time-frame), vertical density (the number of
simultaneous elements sounding), and envelope (the shape of onset and
decay of a sound). Tenney's method of musical analysis is based on the
gestalt perceptual principles of cohesion and segregation, applied to the
perception of the clang (a sound or sound configuration that is perceived
as a primary musical unit) and their perceptual organization into
sequences (successions of clangs on a larger perceptual level or temporal
scale), creating a perceived musical form. Using Tenney's approach (but
not always his terminology), I listen to works by Westerkamp, noting
gestalt patterns of different parameters and how these interact in the
creation of a musical form.
Perceptual Transformations
There are several processes that Westerkamp uses in much of her work.
These include the use of long excerpts of unchanged field recordings;
juxtaposition of edited and manipulated sounds with original recordings,
subtle transformations of sounds using reverberation and filtering,
extended use of pitch-shifting (or in analog work, tape speed changes),
and the occasional use of more radical transformation processes. In the
following pages, I want to consider each of these processes with regard to
their perceptual importance, following Tenney's ideas from Meta+Hodos, and
how these perceptual factors are related to recurrent issues raised in
listener responses to the five pieces that form the next group of
chapters.
Unchanged field recordings and narrativity
When listeners hear excerpts of pieces by Westerkamp in which field
recordings predominate, such as the beginning minutes of Kits Beach
Soundwalk, a common reaction is to question its status as music. To many
people, field recordings sound too close to the sounds of everyday life,
too full of narrative content, to be musical. This is particularly true
with recordings that include human vocalizations (apart from singing),
since our ears hear best within the human vocal range, and we are
pre-conditioned to pay more attention to human vocalizations and to their
potential meanings. Westerkamp wishes people to pay attention to the
musical qualities of everyday sounds as well. She accomplishes this by
juxtaposing these unchanged recordings with excerpts of the same
recordings, subtly transformed to highlight their rhythmic, harmonic,
melodic and timbral patterns of movement through time, emphasizing links
between narrative and music.
Katharine Norman (1994) defends narrativity as musically important
because of the way that composers who work with what she terms "realworld"
sounds "celebrate a connection to the real world" (1994: 104).
... when we listen to a processed realworld sound, and recognize it as
such, we regard the composer as 'doing' something to familiar material.
Processing becomes an activity that guides, and changes, our previous
understanding of the source; it offers an interpretation.... in offering a
new interpretation of something that, nevertheless, remains "known" from
reality, realworld music invites us to deploy, and develop, "ordinary"
listening skills; it encourages us to feel that we are involved, and
participating, in the creation of a story about real life. (1994: 104)
Norman emphasizes that even when the recordist does not speak, signs of
his or her intervention in the field recording still exist as traces of a
presence. For instance, in her discussion of Michel Redolfi's Desert
Tracks, she says:
In his recordings the sounds culled from the California desert are at
times inseparably fused with the signs of his intervention: sounds travel
as he moves the microphone about, we hear the sound of the microphone
being handled, scrunching gravel, a rock moved and replaced. In fact all
the natural but tell-tale signs of a mediating human being who in his
quest for the "desert tone," literally scratches the surfaces to activate
aurally reticent surroundings. He is very much a storyteller who leads us
through the tale: his "metanarrational" presence becomes part of his
material, and part of his subject. (1994: 106) This metanarrational
presence transmitted partially through the perceived motion of the
recordist through the space is similar to the presence I hear in
Westerkamp's field recordings for Gently Penetrating..., and why I refer
to them as soundwalks (even though she would not). In the sections of the
piece using unaltered field recordings, it is as if I walk with her
through the streets of New Delhi, hearing vendors in the distance,
approaching, walking by.
Two interesting questions arise in relation to this narrativity and the
presence of the recordist: how does Westerkamp create a connection between
real world and processed sounds in her studio work; if the composer is
telling a tale, are listeners hearing her tale and/or imagining other
stories? In order to describe how Westerkamp creates connections between
real world and processed sounds, I turn to Tenney's ideas about gestalt
perception.
Juxtaposition-transformation and cohesion-segregation
Tenney interprets ideas regarding visual gestalt perception, based on
the work of Max Wertheimer, in relation to sonic phenomena (1992: 28ff).
The two primary factors producing cohesion are proximity and similarity:
Applied to auditory or musical perception, the factor of proximity
might be formulated as follows: in a collection of sound-elements, those
which are simultaneous or contiguous will tend to form clangs, while
relatively greater separations in time will produce segregations other
factors being equal. (1992: 29) ... in a collection of sound-elements (or
clangs), those which are similar (with respect to values in some
parameter) will tend to form clangs (or sequences) while relative
dissimilarity will produce segregation other factors being equal. (1992:
32) When Westerkamp transforms a sound through electronic processing, with
the intention of highlighting its musical aspects, she will often place
the processed sound in close proximity to the original recording,
emphasizing the similarities between the original sound and its
transformed version. In my interview with her about the creation of Gently
Penetrating... (which is discussed in Chapter Ten), she discussed this
directly in the case of the scooter horn. This is a technique that I have
noticed often in other pieces as well. In Cricket Voice, the original
cricket song continues through much of the piece, juxtaposed with many
transformations. In a transitional section between the beach and dream
sequences in Kits Beach Soundwalk, the original barnacle sounds are in
close proximity to their filtered counterparts.
In most cases, when Westerkamp changes a sound, she focuses on one
particular parameter. For instance, she will filter the sound to emphasize
high frequencies, or add reverberation to alter the envelope of the sound.
Thus, when she places these sounds in close proximity to the original,
changing only one parameter of the sound, she creates a situation in which
listeners will perceive the original and processed sounds fusing into one
clang or sequence, which has been coloured or highlighted to emphasize a
particular parameter, bringing the listener's attention to it.
Another way that Westerkamp uses both proximity and similarity to
emphasize cohesion among sound-elements is to group sounds with
similarities in certain parameters. For instance, in Gently
Penetrating..., she groups together clanking sounds on the basis of their
similar timbres. In Kits Beach Soundwalk, she works with a variety of
high- frequency sounds. This grouping together of sounds based on a common
element increases the level of subjective intensity experienced by the
listener: for instance, with the clank mix in Gently Penetrating..., the
listener hears a sudden torrent of sounds related by their timbre. This
focuses attention on the clank mix, bringing these sounds which formed the
background of a sound environment into the forefront of the listener's
attention. Then, when they are heard again, they are noticed in a
different way.
When the attention is focussed upon one element or group of elements
more directly than it is upon others in a clang, the relative musical
importance of the various elements must obviously be different, with the
less intense elements taking a subordinate role in the total
configuration.... The situation here is analogous in many respects to the
distinctions between figure and ground in visual perception the figure
generally being distinguished by what Koffka calls a greater "energy
density," and by a higher degree of "internal articulation" than the
ground. (Tenney 1992: 40) By taking sounds that were originally heard in
the background of sound environments, and intensifying them by grouping
them together or increasing their amplitude, Westerkamp makes them more
musically important, focuses attention on them, and reverses their
position from ground to figure. Listener responses to Westerkamp's works
often include commentary on hearing everyday sounds in different ways.
Also, listeners comment on their reactions to certain groupings of sounds,
such as high-frequency sounds, machine noises, or the sounds of children's
toys, indicating a shift of attention from ground to figure in their
perception of these sounds.
Yet another way that Westerkamp connects processed and field sounds is
through processing one source sound to link with a different source. For
instance, in my interview with her about the composition of Gently
Penetrating..., she discusses hearing a similarity between the scooter
sound and a certain gruff quality in some of the adult male voices, a
similarity that she intensifies through processing, then juxtaposing those
sounds. She also alters one of the pitch-shifted bell sounds to harmonize
with part of a vocal sequence. Listeners respond to this through
describing a sense of flow in the work, in which sections are not strongly
demarcated but there is a constant sense of gradual flux.
Some sounds are processed more radically. Once again, Westerkamp places
these sounds in the vicinity of the field recording they are derived from.
Because these sounds are often different in more than one parameter, they
would tend to be segregated further from the source sounds than from
others. Westerkamp generally uses such radical transformations to a more
limited extent than other, less radical ones.
Pitch-Shifting, Scale and Interiority
In addition to building on ideas developed by Tenney, I used concepts
employed by film sound designers. One of the primary ways that Westerkamp
transforms sounds is through shifting their pitch. This process alters the
sound scale.4 As well as changing the speed of movement through the
envelope of a sound, which changes its time scale, pitch-shifting a sound
also changes its perceived scale in space as well giving the impression
that the sound is being produced by a larger source for sound files
pitch-shifted down, and a smaller source for sound files pitch-shifted
upwards.5 The amplification and slowing down of small sounds can create an
imaginary space where these small sources are enlarged to human scale or
beyond. Changes in scale have another perceptual effect as well: a change
in focus, as Tenney writes:
We know from our visual experience that a change in scale of a picture
of a thing, or a change in the distance from which we view a thing whether
it be a picture, a landscape, or the figure of a person can substantially
alter the total impression we will have of it.... The full range of this
process might be illustrated by imagining a scene say a field of wheat
which from a certain distance will appear continuous, having a homogeneous
texture that is unbroken by contrasting elements. If one moves closer,
this texture will gradually become less and less homogeneous, until at
last the distance is so shortened that one's field of vision can only
encompass a few of the elements the stalks of wheat. At this point, those
elements which before had been absorbed into the larger unit perceived as
texture, but not distinguishable separately become whole units in their
own right, and the spaces between them are seen as real breaks in
continuity. Similarly, if one starts from the original vantage-point and
increases the distance from the field, one will eventually reach a point
where the whole field is only an element in a larger scene a larger
gestalt that includes houses and a road perhaps, and other fields of a
different color or texture. Again continuity has been replaced by a
relative discontinuity. (1992: 19)
I include such an extensive quote here because it seems so important in
relation to Westerkamp's work. As I note in the previous section, she
establishes continuity and connection between the sound environment and
elements of her composition by juxtaposing sequences that focus listeners'
attention on musical aspects of sounds with field recordings that take the
listener outward to a larger gestalt that includes other sounds. With
pitch shifting, she moves in towards elements of the sound envelope that
are not usually perceived because they move by too fast. By slowing the
sound down, she allows the listener to hear greater articulation in these
elements. By pitch-shifting downwards octave by octave, she maintains a
harmonic connection between the sound sequences (and a timbral connection:
the slowed bicycle bell sounds are still heard as bells, but as different
bells church or temple bells). Since these sound sequences begin at the
same time, the effect is to gradually move in towards the details of the
sound, at the same time perceiving more discontinuity as the sequence
progresses, and each juxtaposed octave is moving at a different speed
through the envelope. As listeners pay more attention to these details,
the larger gestalt of the original recordings moves further out of focus,
enabling Westerkamp to use the later portions of these sequences as
transitional points in the work.
When Westerkamp shifts the pitch of a sound, she changes its character
more than with the subtle transformation of adding reverberation or
filtering. Pitch-shifting downward (also known as time-stretching), like
its analog counterpart tape-speed change, focuses attention on the
envelope of the sound, since the effect is to slow down the sound, moving
through onset, sustain and decay over a longer period, allowing the
listener to hear the intricacies of the sound. Just as a microscope allows
a viewer to see the internal microstructures of an organism,
pitch-shifting allows a listener to hear microstructures in the evolution
of a sound through time metaphorically speaking, to hear the inside of a
sound.6 While I am referring here to the perception of the sound, this
feeling of interiority seems to be associated in listeners with human
mental and physical states as well as with the sound itself. This concept
of movement between inside and outside, internal and external states, is
one that arose repeatedly in listener responses to sections of
Westerkamp's work in which pitch-shifting is used. Listeners would write
about dream states, fantasies, and movement from internal to external
environments, and sometimes specifically associate these movements with
slowed (time-stretched or pitch-shifted) sounds (see particularly Gently
Penetrating..., Breathing Room, and Cricket Voice).
David Schwarz discusses a similar movement between internal and
external states in the music of Steve Reich, focusing on his works
Different Trains, It's Gonna Rain, and Come Out which, like Westerkamp's
work, use recognizable environmental and vocal sounds as well as
transformations of those sounds in a compositional process. Schwarz refers
to such music as creating a "sonorous envelope" that activates the
imagination, which he associates both with the mother's voice and the
womb, associations which Westerkamp explores in Moments of Laughter.
Schwarz defines the sonorous envelope in terms of lack (of binary
opposition, structural markers, and regular phrase structure), whereas I
would describe the same music by Reich in terms of its focus (on timbral
qualities, gradual transformation, rhythmic shifts) facilitated through
repetition. However, what is most interesting about Schwarz's discussion
is his insistence that this movement between interiority and exteriority
can be experienced as positive or negative:
The relationship between the sound of the maternal voice and the infant
within the sonorous envelope is paradoxical. On the one hand, envelopment
suggests undifferentiated, oceanic, expansive oneness; on the other hand,
it suggests being contained, enclosed, and marked off. Thus, the sonorous
envelope can be either a positive or negative fantasy. (1997: 277). This
quote is particularly interesting in relation to some listener responses
to Westerkamp's work as unsettling or disturbing. Recently, when I gave a
paper on Westerkamp's Cricket Voice at Concordia University, Paul ThŸberge
suggested to me that some of the listener responses that indicated
disturbance or fear may be because of a fear of "going inside," a movement
that many listeners experience in relation to Westerkamp's work. I thought
this was an interesting suggestion: when I read Schwarz' article a few
days later, the connection was more obvious. Schwarz makes reference to
Freud's conception of the uncanny:
Freud discusses the uncanny not in terms of a binary opposition between
the comfortable, familiar world "inside" (the mind, the home, society,
etc.) and a threatening, external, evil force. Rather the uncanny seems to
emerge out of what had been familiar. Freud discovers this dynamic within
the etymology of the word heimlich (familiar, in German). Freud realized
that the word first meant "familiar" "trusted" and slowly acquired
additional connotations of "secret" and "hidden." (1997: 289, his
emphasis) When a sound is slowed down, its internal workings are revealed,
and what was familiar becomes unfamiliar. For some, to "go inside" a
sound, to move from a feeling of exteriority to one of interiority, can
seem threatening and constraining (see especially "Alien-ated Responses"
in the Cricket Voice chapter).7 For others, this is a positive experience
that can enhance movement from exteriority to interiority in their daily
lives: for instance, many listeners spoke of Westerkamp's work as being
meditative, indicating a movement towards a focused and clear internal
state.
A new place sings back
I want to transport listeners into a place that s close to where I am
when I compose, and which I like. They re going to occupy that place
differently, by listening to it differently, but still, it s a place. HW
Westerkamp begins with a specific place the location of recording.
Through the process of composition, a new place is created which is
connected to the original location, transformed through Westerkamp's
experience of it, and by her compositional choices. This creates a work
that says something about the place, while leaving room for listeners to
inhabit it in many different ways. In the chapters that follow, I will
consider listener responses to five of Westerkamp's pieces.
Electroacoustic Music Analysis and Listener Responses
A way of achieving the goal of focusing both on the acoustic and
psychoacoustic phenomena of musical works, as well as their meanings to
various listeners, is to integrate a musical analysis based on listening
to all parameters of the music with a wide variety of listener responses.
Michael Bridger's (1989) approach to the analysis of electroacoustic
music, borrowing from Roland Barthes's S/Z, claims to integrate empirical
investigation with listener responses. It appears from the article that
his listeners are his electroacoustic music students.
Bridger, like others, points to the absence of a score as a problem,
but solves it by developing a simple graphic notation. Initially, he
attempts to graph all features of the music, but decides that this
approach is too complex. He then decides on salient features of the
pieces, relying on what attracts listeners' attention:
it is perhaps not surprising that appearances in the music of
identifiable elements of conventional music, or the human voice, or of
recognisable concr‰te sounds were three characteristics that seemed always
to attract listeners' attention. Three further characteristics, this time
not of sound types, but rather of ways of organizing, differentiating,
developing that material into expressive statements (again derived from
discussion with listeners) were location, dynamics (interpreted broadly to
include both volume and activity levels) and those recurrences,
juxtapositions or transitions that were perceived as having structural
significance. In total, then six 'codes of signification' emerged....
(Bridger 1989: 148, his emphasis)
Bridger's work is an important expansion of electroacoustic music
analysis in its attempts to synthesize methods of analysis from music and
other disciplines, by its analysis of several parameters, extending
analytic focus beyond pitch and tonality, and by its inclusion of salient
features identified by listeners. My own approach differs from Bridger's
in that while he analyses the music depending on what listeners hear as
salient features, I attempt a deep descriptive analysis of each piece,
attempting to mark as many features as possible, then compare my analysis
with other listener responses.
When I read Bridger's work, I wonder who these listeners are? How many
are there? How old are they? What is their cultural background? Their
gender? What level of musical training do they have? All that Bridger
tells us is that he led discussions:
Having been involved in teaching aspects of electroacoustic music to
undergraduate students for many years, I decided to take whatever
opportunities I could to develop not only views on this music, but also a
framework for eliciting those views, less from my one [sic] prejudices,
judgments and speculation, than from discussion and empirical
investigation. (Bridger 1989: 147)
So these are listeners in Bridger's music classes, taking part in
discussions with their professor. This is a particular interpretive
community, as described by Stanley Fish (1980), a community which has
particular assumptions, aims and concerns. Fish claims that
interpretations are shaped by the institutional forces of a particular
community. One particularly interesting account in his book is the claim
of a student that she could pass any course in the English department by
focusing on interpretive routines that were currently acceptable: nature
vs. culture, large mythological oppositions, the fragmentation of the
author's own anxieties and fears, and so on (1980: 343). If one accepts
the power of institutional forces within an interpretive community, it
would follow that open discussions with a professor in his class would be
likely to affirm the professor's value judgments, rather than questioning
them. In his article "Rethinking Contemporary Music Theory," Patrick
McCreless argues that members of a discipline (he is talking about music
theory, but the argument could apply to other academic disciplines) tend
to be motivated to maintain the boundaries and assumptions of that
discipline through validation of those boundaries and assumptions:
That is, internalized structures of disciplinary power serve as a force
to motivate individuals to define themselves within the discipline by
"producing," so that by thus strengthening their connection to the
discipline, they strengthen the discipline itself both by expanding its
knowledge and by validating its hold upon them. (McCreless 1997: 33) It is
interesting to note how the values and assumptions that I discussed in
Chapter Three are reinscribed by Bridger's analytical project. I will
follow some of his references to John Cage's Fontana Mix in comparison
with other works in the selected group, showing how value judgments about
Cage are reinforced and maintained.
the fragments of voice in Fontana Mix are assumed to be randomly
overheard snippets, removed from the original contexts that could have
created a sense of personal expression; in contrast, the electronically
processed fragments incorporated in [Karlheinz Stockhausen's] Telemusik,
though similarly transplanted into the composition, somehow do preserve a
quality of communication at a primary level. (Bridger 1989: 151) Here
Bridger implies a listener's point of view when he says that the vocal
fragments "are assumed to be randomly overheard snippets." He tells us
that the Cage piece does not communicate to the listener in contrast with
Stockhausen's work which communicates on the basis of a sense of personal
expression. But who is the listener here? He does not say.
In Fontana Mix, some of the most striking ingredients are the fragments
of choral and orchestral sound that make fleeting appearances, but as with
the voice elements mentioned above, the immediately apparent structural
principle of random collage denies the possibility of a committed
emotional response. The brief fragment of organ music, strategically
placed towards the end of Po‰me ’lectronique, on the other hand, creates
both by its placing and the clearly intentioned repetition a much more
telling impact. (1989: 152)
In this quote, collage appears as random, not as structured chance
procedures, set against the strategies and clear intentions of Var‰se's
work. Who has decided which ingredients are most striking? Whose emotional
response are we talking about? Which listeners? They remain inaudible.
The barking dog at the end of Fontana Mix, and the similarly placed
sound of a plane taking off in Po‰me ’lectronique, establish a sense of
impending closure (presumably by design in one case, by accident in the
other!). (1989: 153) Just in case we did not get the point earlier, he
repeats the opposition between Cage and Var‰se.
Except in the case of Fontana Mix, which eschews formal, progressive
structure in the case of indeterminacy of its collage, the pieces display
many of the traditional concerns of any composer, of this and earlier
epochs, in shaping material into convincing aesthetic and expressive
designs. (1989: 157) The focus here has shifted entirely from listening to
the concerns of the composer, specifically a definition of composition in
which indeterminacy apparently does not fit.
A revolution even more epic in scale, if ultimately less productive,
was made by Fontana Mix, with the quantum leap of its evident abandonment
of structural intentionality making a massive shift to a qualitatively
different philosophy of musical structure; the other formal innovations in
the works involve new methods of structuring, but do not redefine the
value and role of structure itself. (1989: 157) Here, Cage is given his
due as a composer who led a revolution "epic in scale," though it is still
qualified as unproductive. In the final sentence, Bridger describes Cage's
work as redefining the value and role of structure itself, rather than as
redefining the value of intention in structure, i.e. creating structures
built on non-intention. Again, the focus is on the role of the composer.
The listeners, only ever appearing as an undifferentiated group, have
completely disappeared from the discourse.
The focus in Bridger's discussion remains exclusively on the internal
workings of the music, with no references to meaning:
Even when not specifically intended to do so by their composers, works
in a medium that encompasses categories of sound primarily associated with
'real-life' rather than 'artistic' activity are likely to suggest
programmatic or descriptive analogy to listeners. In view of this, it is
perhaps remarkable, even a tribute to their composers' handling of the
medium, that these particular works did not seem to evoke stronger
extra-musical images. Only [Luciano Berio's] Visage, with its overtly
quasi-dramatic ambience, creates a consistent and persuasive sense of
narrative, and, because of this, more abstract qualities of structure are
somewhat eclipsed as the listener's attention is engaged by the episodic
event-flow expected in an idiom akin to film or radio drama. (1989: 158)
Here, he acknowledges that one work does elicit meanings, but does not
consider them worthy of notice: he does not say what those meanings are.8
He praises the composers for avoiding the suggestion of descriptive
analogy, yet I would suppose that students aware of Bridger's beliefs
about music and self-referentiality would be unlikely to discuss any
images that they experienced. While Bridger's work is valuable as an
exploration into the incorporation of listeners' responses, this
annexation of listener responses remains at a superficial level, not
really disturbing the discussion of accepted knowledge within the
electroacoustic community, and the assumptions that support it. My study
incorporates listener responses in a much more integral way. I include
responses from a wider range of interpretive communities, facilitate frank
discussion through the use of pseudonyms in individual written responses,
and represent more of the listeners' voices through reference to extensive
quotes in their own words.
To some extent, I have been guided in this by feminist studies.
Analysis of electroacoustic works within feminist musicology does attempt
to include discussion of meanings as well as the internal workings of the
music. Susan McClary notes the importance of this approach in her analysis
of work by Laurie Anderson:
Most of the analytical techniques that have been developed in academic
music theory slide right off her pieces. Because much of her music is
triadic, the harmonic theory designed for the analysis of the standard
eighteenth- and nineteenth-century repertories might seem relevant. But
all harmonic theory can do is to label the pairs of alternating chords
that often serve as the materials for her pieces. (1991: 135) McClary's
approach goes beyond harmonic analysis into a discussion of critical
theory as it relates to gender, technology and the body in performance,
situating Anderson's work socially and politically as well as musically.
At the same time, McClary's own analysis of Anderson's "music itself"
(1991: 139ff), like traditional harmonic analysis, focuses much more on
pitch and tonality than on other parameters of the music such as timbre
and rhythm. She discusses the social meanings of pitch and tonality, but
does not extend her analysis, except in passing, to other aspects of the
musical language. Also, in McClary's work, while there is significant
focus on the listening process, it is McClary's listening. A wider variety
of listener responses is not included.
Reception Theory and Listening
Reception theory emerged initially in literary theory as a project to
problematize the traditional supremacy of the author's intent, and to
provide a space for the consideration of how readers read texts, how they
change texts through their interpretation of them.9 Although initial work
in this area focused either on the nourishment of an 'ideal reader' who
would be well-informed enough to appreciate a work, or on the mediated
responses of mass audiences, constructed statistically, more recent work
has focused on particular individuals and their shifting relationships to
various interpretive communities.
It is this more recent work that interests me the most, because of its
emphasis on individual voices within different community contexts. In
earlier research projects,10 I have worked using a research method based
on listening and responding to issues raised by informants, making use of
"generative themes," a term used by Paulo Freire (1983, 1988). Freire
advocated literacy education based on the concerns of the students, and
the development of critical awareness of their socio-political position
through discussions which were built around themes that were generated by
the participants' concerns. I was also influenced by "respectful
intervention," an approach used by Fr. Gerry Pantin (1982) who led the
community group SERVOL in Trinidad, a group that was the focus of my
educational research in 1986. SERVOL had achieved great success from
grass-roots beginnings by focusing on listening to people, and responding
to issues that they raised. Important aspects of respectful intervention
are a focus on issues raised by people in the community, the balancing of
the researcher's voice with those of the research subjects, and a respect
on the part of the researcher for the ideas and experiences of those
people.
When my research interests shifted to focus on gender and technology in
the late 1980s, I was drawn to the work of Evelyn Fox Keller, particularly
her writing about Barbara McClintock, one of the three women scientists
whose epistemology is discussed by Lorraine Code in an earlier quote in
this dissertation (Chapter Three, page 121). McClintock, a geneticist,
spoke of "letting the material tell you," (quoted in Keller 1983: 179) and
developing a "feeling for the organism" that showed a respect for her
research subjects, and a focus on their particular situation, that
resonated with the way that I had begun to do research. I also found Donna
Haraway's discussion of "situated knowledges" (1991: 198) useful in her
focus on the agency of research subjects, and her suggestion that the
production of knowledge be considered as a conversation between researcher
and subjects.
Until this point, my research had been from the perspective of adult
learning. When I began graduate work in Music and decided to research
women composers, I found some useful discussions of dialogic research
methods in ethnography11 and feminist research methodologies.12 I
experimented with methods of ensuring consultant interaction in my
Master's thesis in Music at York University (McCartney 1994). In that
work, I interviewed fourteen women electroacoustic composers from across
Canada, and discussed their lives and compositional approaches. An
important part of that project was to communicate with all the consultants
after the initial draft was complete, sending them drafts of sections
including their quotes and my interpretations of those quotes, in order to
allow them to make editorial changes: editing their quotes; deleting any
information that they did not want to divulge publicly; and polishing the
style so that they were not the raw complements to my very cooked writing.
This ensured that they had some measure of control over editing processes,
so that I was respecting their wishes while representing them and
developing my own lines of thought. With the present study, I have
extended my consultation process to include an ongoing conversation with
Westerkamp, and have attempted to construct dialogues with listeners about
her work through the use of extensive quotes.
My respect for the voices of research subjects is similar to the
respect shown by Westerkamp for the voices of the places that she records.
In her work, these voices remain in balance with her transformations of
them, and retain an important place in her works through the use of
unchanged field recordings as significant components of the pieces. My own
research work includes long quotes from research participants, and
discussions of issues raised by them, in ways that are intended to reflect
my respect for their diversity and for differences from my own views. I
attempt to maintain a balance between the voices of my consultants, and my
transformations of those voices through my interpretations of what they
are saying and how they relate to each other.
In much the same way as Westerkamp creates a dialogue between her
imaginal world and the recorded sounds through juxtaposition of unchanged
field recordings and transformed sounds, I wish to create a dialogue
between my ideas, issues and explanations and those of the participants in
my research. Westerkamp listens to the recordings, hearing emergent
patterns in sounds that might otherwise remain in the background, then
juxtaposes these background sounds of a similar timbre, melody or rhythm
to bring the listener's attention to them. In a similar way, I juxtapose
participants' quotes about issues that had not occurred to me initially,
that moved from the background into the foreground of my attention as I
read through the responses and saw similar issues emerge repeatedly in
some listeners' responses. Sometimes I would see a repeated word, such as
"essentialism," or a repeated phrase, such as "the miracle of birth."
Occasionally it would be a group of related places, such as movements from
inside to outside places in responses to Breathing Room. At times, related
imagery would catch my attention, such as the stories of alien
confrontations in responses to Cricket Voice. I grouped these related
words, phrases, references to places and imagery, in much the same way
that Westerkamp groups sounds with related sonic parameters. It was only
after I had made these groupings that I would look for groupings in
identity among respondents who had made similar commentaries.
At times, in my readings of responses to Westerkamp's work, I began
researching an issue raised in the responses that truly confounded me at
first, for example the "alien confrontation" responses to Cricket Voice. I
have been concerned at times that I tend to write at greatest length about
responses that differ most from mine, seeking what I might refer to as
productive dilemmas, searching for those moments of confusion. Jack
Mezirow (1988)13 writes that disorienting dilemmas result in the most
significant and lasting learning, because they change a person's
assumptions. Attinasi and Friedrich (1995: 18) refer to these significant
turbulent moments as "dialogical breakthroughs," and suggest that the
intervention of others' ideas is essential to their genesis. Clearly, this
kind of learning excites me. It is a moment of subjective intensity, where
suddenly my own ideas are transformed and thrown into a different
perspective by others'. I have attempted to balance this excitement by
making sure that productive dilemmas are not the only source of fuel for
writing, representing also the voices of those who identify with
Westerkamp's approach in a similar way to my response.
Westerkamp wants to leave room for listeners to encounter places
differently, depending on their own experiences. In a similar fashion, I
wish for the audience to be able to experience Westerkamp's works in their
own ways. I ask for open-ended responses, encouraging participants to
write in whatever form they like, such as poetry or short phrases,
allowing room for a creative response to Westerkamp's work. I ask
participants to respond individually, before group discussion and possible
consensus.
My desire for diversity of interpretation also influences my open
interpretations of listener responses. By quoting metaphorical and
imagistic listener responses next to more prose- oriented quotes, I create
a dialogue not only between different ideas, but also between different
ways of thinking. I believe that writing that uses poetic forms of
language as well as more traditional academic forms can offer access to
different ways of thinking about issues.14 Sometimes, after grouping
related responses, I ask open-ended questions or suggest several possible
explanations for responses rather than defining a single interpretation
based on my own opinion. By focusing on the issues raised in the
responses, and by speaking to those issues, my intention is to avoid what
Ruth Behar (1995: 151) calls the "violence of representation" that pays no
regard to what subjects actually say. I wish to leave some space for the
reader to construct their own interpretations, based on what I have
recorded and presented, in dialogue with a range of responses that are
inevitably framed by me, but hopefully not therefore unduly restricted.
My approach to the incorporation of listener responses contributes to
the recent focus on specific listeners and their relationships to
interpretive communities, and how this constellation of responses can
create a more multi-faceted knowledge about a musical work. My pilot
project in music reception was a comparison of listener responses to
several Canadian electroacoustic works. The design of that project, as
well as my thinking about many of the issues that it raised, owes much to
the recent work of Karen Pegley,15 whose approach, based on group
reception, questionnaires and individual interviews of respondents to
Madonna's Justify My Love, is enticing both due to its focus on actual
listeners and to her direct engagement with issues in music that are at
once controversial and sensitive. I decided for this initial project to
concentrate on works that seemed to test the boundaries of acceptability
in some way: acceptability as music, or as electroacoustic music. One such
type of work is the controversial, the focus of argument and debate, of
booing and cheering. I think here of just a few well-known examples from
other types of music: the initial reception of Stravinsky's Rite of
Spring, Bizet's Carmen, or many of Madonna's concerts. When a piece or a
performance becomes controversial, it inspires public debate over
aesthetic, epistemological, and ethical issues. Even though controversy
involves criticism as well as approbation, it holds the possibility of
reinforcing canonic representation, if not initially then perhaps
eventually, through the attention accorded both the composer and the work.
Some works inspire controversy, while others seem to evoke no response.
"Silence" is ambiguous: a dictionary definition of the noun includes
absence of sound, stillness, absence or omission of mention, the state of
being forgotten, oblivion, concealment, secrecy. The verb "to silence"
implies the overpowering of one by another. Elizabeth Long (1994) notes
that in the textual communities of reading groups, silence is used as a
form of control by group members to discourage certain reading directions.
Composers I have talked with attribute silence about their pieces to
embarrassment, ignorance, lack of caring, and avoidance of issues, but are
never sure what people mean by their silence. I do not know of an instance
where silence about a piece has given it canonic status. Silence can also
mean not worthy of attention; one of my respondents questioned whether
these pieces were worth studying. This is the assumption that I think
underlies the relations among controversy, reception, and silence. Marcia
Citron says:
[Reception] serves as the framework in which pieces are reviewed and
marked off for attention. This attention implies that the work must be
worthy of attention and therefore important. Even if the assessment is
negative, an implied significance is present that is missing when a work
is not reviewed. Attention in print [or other media] can lead to further
performances and potential canonicity. (Citron, 1993: 168) One of the most
interesting pieces in the group of works from this initial project in
relation to controversy and silence was Westerkamp's Moments of Laughter.
While the initial public response to this work was fairly muted, with only
a few listeners reporting to Westerkamp that they found it "too personal,"
the anonymous listener responses to this work in my study were sometimes
strongly worded, almost hostile, indicating some of the controversial
issues that may lie behind the silence of some audience members.
These reactions also point out an advantage of my approach to listener
responses. I ask listeners to respond in writing, using a pseudonym. I do
not ask any specific questions about the work: "these responses can be in
any form phrases, paragraphs, poetry... and about any aspect of your
listening: musical structure, imagery, memories, places that the piece
evokes" (listener response form). This format, to a certain extent, frees
listeners from the constraints of a listening community, emphasizing
individual response. They know that they are speaking to me, but that in
most cases, I do not know who they are. Often, in discussions after a
listening session, people would express less oppositional viewpoints, and
would certainly use less loaded language. But in the written responses,
protected by the cloak of a pseudonym, sometimes they would be quite
unconventional or brutally honest about their reaction to the work. These
responses, while sometimes disturbing, provide important clues to the
range of attitudes that inform musical values.
The pseudonyms allow respondents to create an alternate identity if
they wish. For instance, some women chose a "masculine" name, such as
David, or Ralph. Although some men chose ungendered names such as Rusty,
none chose a "feminine" name. Many respondents chose flamboyant names such
as "Malaclypse the Younger." In some cases, they had literary
associations, such as Ishmael.16 Some did not include a name, in which
case I would give them one. Sometimes the names chosen by respondents had
an uncanny connection to their attitudes: the young man who shouts (in his
words) "Shut up lady!" in response to Westerkamp's Moments of Laughter
calls himself "Biff," a combative17 pseudonym that conjures up for me an
image of a cocksure young tough.
While the anonymity of the responses encourages individual reactions to
works, slowing the movement towards consensus that characterizes group
work, similarities among groups of responses did emerge. For instance,
many women's studies students were concerned about essentialism and
several electroacoustic composition students made comments about the use
and extent of electronic manipulation. Another issue is the extent to
which particular works appeal to different groupings or interpretive
sub-communities of respondents.18 Marcia Citron says that an intended
audience is already inscribed within a musical work:
Such a figure is no socially neuter presence, but rather an individual
defined by social location, especially gender, class, nationality,
sexuality, and race. This does not mean that the piece holds less meaning
for some other kind of respondent, but rather different meaning. (1993:
174, her emphasis) Citron goes on to ask whether there is such a thing as
a woman's response to musical works. She notes the problem of essentialism
with such a question, and discusses how postmodern theorists claim that
anyone can read or listen "as a woman." Citron insists that the political
position of women, more than their biology, can affect their listening.
While listeners are certainly affected by their political positions, it is
important to note that any listener responds not only in relation to one
political location, but to a constellation of them. For instance, a
listener in my sample may at one point be responding influenced by her
identity as a woman, at another as an immigrant to Canada from Vietnam, at
another as a music student, at another as a composer, at another as an
adolescent, at another as a lesbian, at many points influenced by some
combination of these identities.
The ability of a listener to speak clearly from any of these positions
is differently constrained and enabled, depending on the privileges and
limitations associated with each position.19 For instance, electroacoustic
composers and composition students were more likely to articulate clear
commentary on the musical structure and compositional strategies of
Westerkamp's works. At the same time, their focus on musical structure
sometimes led them to exclude other aspects of the work, such as the
meanings of sounds or imagery related to sounds: composer McCreless,
reading Rose Subotnick, notes that it is not just focus that may be at
work here: structural listening is more highly valued in music theory than
listening for meaning:
... structural listening, at least in its more limited forms, is
self-reflexive and hermetically sealed from social issues.... Subotnick
rightly charges that our educational system has for years insisted on
structural listening at the expense of socially aware listening, and that
if our system of values prizes the former excessively over the latter,
young musicians will remain insensitive to extramusical meaning, or, alas,
like many music theorists, simply ignore it. But structural listening does
not logically or perceptually exclude other types of listening. (1997: 47)
McCreless goes on to assert that it is not necessary to make a choice
between structural and socially-aware listening: both can happen, if the
analyst considers both worthwhile, and the musical analysis will be
enriched as a result. However, in the case of my listening sessions, most
respondents only had the opportunity to listen to a piece once. In this
situation, I would suggest that they tended to return to strategies that
were most familiar to them in the case of electroacoustic composers,
structural listening.
A more radically restricted listening occurs when listeners decide that
a piece does not count as music: at this point, they appear to stop
listening for musical aspects. The attitude that the piece is not music
prevents them from hearing its musical structure at all. This happened
with some of the electroacoustic composers: even though they clearly had
the skills to articulate a musical structure, they stopped using these
skills at the point that they dismissed a piece as "not music." At the
same time, electroacoustic composers are generally privileged as
authoritative listeners to electroacoustic music: as insiders, trained and
skilled practitioners, they are considered as experts.
Listeners without such highly developed musical skills generally made
more tentative and less detailed commentary on musical structure. Not
considering themselves skilled authorities as structural listeners, their
responses tended to be more muted. My approach in the analyses is to
juxtapose these briefer, more muted responses with more detailed and
articulated descriptions of the musical structure, indicating points of
similarity and difference. This tends to amplify these more muted
responses, through juxtaposition with those of experts.
I was fortunate in this work to have access to a number of interpretive
communities, who were able to contribute differently to my understanding
of a range of listener responses. For instance, the 'restricted listening'
of students in a graduate course in Women's Studies tended to focus
primarily on concerns about gender identity, essentialism and gender
stereotyping. The more articulated responses in this group were used in
juxtaposition with less clearly articulated responses by others which I
read as gender issues. Following Beverley Diamond in her discussion of
musical life stories on Prince Edward Island, I refer here to those less
articulated responses as "enacted":
... if an interviewee said that her father played the fiddle and,
further, that s/he didn't know why women didn't play very much, that was
regarded as an articulated gender issue. However, if a consultant simply
described male fiddle players without drawing attention to the gender
specificity implied by the description, this was considered an "enacted"
gender issue. The distinction may seem pedantic but it served as a tool
for examining patterns of gender awareness. While everyone "enacted"
gender issues in their musical dealings with other people, only a limited
number "articulated" gender issues in relation to very specific
experiential contexts. (Diamond 1999: 5) Using this term makes the
important point that gender issues do not disappear because people are
unable or unwilling to articulate them. They are still there, taking place
silently. When they are understood as enacted, it brings these issues to
the attention of the researcher even though the respondent may not
recognize them as such.
Similarly, an undergraduate class in ethnomusicology was more aware and
articulate about issues of race and class, as well as gender, than were
other listeners, and tended to focus more on these aspects of the music.
Again, I included their articulated responses in tandem with enacted
responses about the same issues. Another group, the adolescent girls, were
much more articulate about memories of family in relation to Moments of
Laughter than other groups in my sample. I was able to use their responses
both to amplify less articulate responses about family life in other
groups, and to problematize this difference among respondents.
In the previous paragraphs, I note a persistent interest in
disciplinarity and how it affects listening. This is likely an increased
concern because most of my listening sessions took place in university or
high school classrooms. I did make concerted efforts to expand this
listening sample, such as asking for responses on the internet, writing
personal letters to people in India who had heard Westerkamp's music,
playing pieces on the radio and asking for responses, making listener
response forms available at several concerts of Westerkamp's work. The
amount of effort involved in these approaches was considerable, yet I
accumulated a much smaller number of (sometimes quite brief) responses in
comparison with the results from large "captive audiences" available in
educational institutions, who tended to write extensive responses. I have
often been critical of surveys that are limited to academic institutions.
Having now done such a project, I am more symapthetic than before,
realizing the very practical considerations involved.
While I am interested in differences and similarities among the
responses that I received to these works, my main interest is how they add
to my knowledge about the pieces of music and the issues raised by the
music. My juxtaposing of responses from listeners of different disciplines
is an attempt to balance the restricted listening associated with each
discipline. As throughout this dissertation, I am attempting to move
towards objectivity not through removing myself from the object of study,
but by using each piece of music as a way of sounding out a range of
responses that will amplify and complicate each other, recognizing that
each respondent is, in Lorraine Code's (1991) terms, a "second person"20
who can add in some way to an understanding of the particular musical
piece, as well as a range of other issues related to it. The knowledge
thus gained is still limited by the fact that most of the responses
originate in academic institutions, by the fact that most of my
respondents are Canadians, and primarily by the fact that only one person
is framing them. While my committee guides me well, and Westerkamp has
been very generous in reading and responding to my work, the analysis is
mine. I comb through the database, select parts of responses in relation
to issues that I have noticed, juxtapose them and discuss similarities and
differences among the responses.
So how is my listening reduced? I am a white European-born woman, as is
Westerkamp. We both spent part of our childhoods in institutional
environments: for Westerkamp, a factory; for me, a hospital. We immigrated
to Canada within days of each other, have both married, had children,
divorced, struggled to find our creative voices, and found a space to do
that in soundscape composition. How much of this experience was inscribed
into the relatively abstract piece Cricket Voice,21 which outwardly does
not seem to be about any of these things, except the last? How much do
these similarities in our experiences make me the inscribed listener that
Marcia Citron writes about? Certainly these connections affect me as an
analyst of her music. My responses to most of her work have been
overwhelmingly positive: I still listen to it with joy, after spending
months listening intently and writing about it.
In order to describe Westerkamp's music, I have engaged in analytical
description, attempting to understand the musical structure by hearing its
major sections and its overall shape. I have brought together listener
responses, searching for common issues that emerge throughout. I have also
attempted to understand her approach to music by working in similar ways
myself. My interest in participatory research began with my experience as
a student in Cultural Studies at Trent University in 1983, where many
courses integrated theoretical and practical components. My learning in
this situation was much deeper and more significant than it was in purely
theoretical or purely practical courses. Since then, I have attempted to
integrate creative participation into all my research projects, and to
seek out learning and teaching situations that emphasize praxis.22 My
creative engagement with Westerkamp's work took me along several related
paths. In the development of my electronic installation, Soundwalking
Queen Elizabeth Park, I joined Westerkamp on a soundwalk, listening with
her, then composed pieces about the park using compositional techniques
similar to Westerkamp's. I also rehearsed and performed Moments of
Laughter, learning to produce the sounds described in the score, and
feeling the emotional intensity of this piece each time that I went
through it. This allowed me to experience a number of different roles in
relation to Westerkamp. The complexities of these roles emerged in my
performance of Moments of Laughter in Chicago, as part of a larger
performance that also included several of my own works. There I was acting
as performer, composer and musicologist simultaneously. In the
Soundwalking installation, I was working with Westerkamp's recording. I
thought a lot about her statements about treating sounds with respect, as
I worked with the sounds of her presence within that place. Also, the
process of making this installation led me to discuss my own compositional
process, and to acknowledge how it differed from Westerkamp's as well as
how it was similar.
My approach to understanding Westerkamp's work has involved many
different kinds of dialogue: between myself as listener, musicologist,
composer and performer and her as recordist and composer of the works;
between her approach to composing and my approach to analysis; and among
the ideas of other listeners, my own ideas, and those of scholars writing
about issues raised by responses to the works. These dialogues shape the
interpretations of the pieces that form the focus of the next five
chapters.
1 For instance, theory classes in many university undergraduate
programs maintain a primary focus on harmonic analysis.
2 Ann Basart's bibliography of electronic and serial music has a
section entitled "Analysis and Theory" for serial music, but no such
section for electronic music, indicating the dearth of analyses in 1963.
However, by 1984, there were a few available, for instance Larry
Polansky's analyses of James Tenney's early electronic works (Polansky
1984).
3 Although the emphasis on pitch (and to a lesser extent, rhythm) in
traditional scores encourages analysts to focus on these aspects to the
neglect of others which are more difficult to notate.
4 I am applying this term as it is used by film sound designers. Rick
Altman defines it: the apparent size attributed to characters and objects
by the characteristics of the sounds they make (1992: 252). 5 In the
Cricket Voice responses, there are references to "giant crickets" when
Westerkamp slows down the cricket song.
6 I have heard several composers refer to this: Barry Truax talks about
hearing the inside of a sound in reference to granular synthesis, which,
like tape-speed changes, moves through a sound more slowly. Also, Wende
Bartley has used similar terminology, referring specifically to the
microscope analogy that I use here.
7 Westerkamp moves between interiority and exteriority in her works
using a variety of means. Moments of Laughter, for instance, explores the
boundaries of private and public, external and internal, subjectivity and
objectivity, by examining the sonic relationship between mother and child,
normally considered private, in the public realm of the concert hall. In
Cricket Voice, she also uses spatialization to move sounds around the
listener, circling in close, and at times appearing to move sounds through
the listener (this is particularly apparent using headphones). Also in
Cricket Voice, interior spaces are evoked through the amplification of
Westerkamp knocking on and stroking various types of cactus, gestures that
reveal the inner resonances of the plants. However, I focus on
pitch-shifting here because it seemed to evoke the strongest responses
from listeners.
8 This assertion that meaning is not important is also found elsewhere
in the field of music theory, an attitude criticized by Walter Benjamin.
Writing in 1988, in his article "Canadian Music and the International
Marketplace," Benjamin finds limitations in music theory based on
excessive attention to formal rules, as well as a lack of focus on both
sound and meaning: "Training in music theory has undergone a revolution in
recent years, but it too is plagued, in its treatment of new music, by
limitations. One is an undue preoccupation with music as strings of
symbols generated via formal rules; another, which complements the first,
is a lack of understanding of music as an acoustical, or psychoacoustical
phenomenon, as sound structure rather than symbolic string structure; and
a third is a reluctance to come to terms with music as having meaning
including various kinds of extra-musical meaning." (1988: 129)
9 For an introduction to the major thinkers in reception theory, see
Holub, Robert C. Reception Theory: A Critical Introduction. New York:
Methuen, 1984. Holub discusses the ideas of many German theorists starting
in the '60s, particularly Jauss and Iser. He also follows the roots of
their thought in Russian Formalism, the sociology of literature, and
Prague structuralism. In another section, he discusses alternative models
developed through communication theory, Marxist reception theory from East
Germany, and empirical reception theory. For an introduction to
contemporary work in cultural studies, see Cruz, Jon, and Justin Lewis,
eds. Viewing, Reading, Listening: Audiences and Cultural Reception.
Boulder, CO: Westview, 1994, which considers broad questions of
representation in cross-disciplinary research. This book does focus more
on viewing and reading than on listening: there is only one article on
music, and although another refers to MTV in the title, the article itself
focuses on visuals. See also Hall, Stuart. "Encoding/Decoding." In
Culture, Media, Language, ed. S. Hall et al. London: Hutchinson, 1980.
Empirical texts are more common in literary studies than elsewhere, and
seem to concentrate on nourishing the 'ideal reader.' See, for example,
Anderson, Philip, and Gregory Rubano. Theory and Research into Practice:
Enhancing Aesthetic Reading and Response. Urban, IL: National Council of
Teachers of English, 1991. For reception issues in music, see Leppert,
Richard, and Susan McClary, eds. Music and Society: The Politics of
Composition, Performance and Reception. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1987. This anthology, while important because it brings questions
of reception into the musical realm, considers mostly historical and
theoretical issues. Any responses discussed are in the published domain.
Marcia Citron's Gender and the Musical Canon. Cambridge: Cambridge UP,
1993, considers questions of reception in music, particularly as they
relate to canonicity. Again, responses are from published texts. Judith
Vander's Songprints: The Musical Experience of Five Shoshone Women,
Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1988, is an excellent example of
how long interviews with respondents can contribute to a deeper
understanding of musical culture. Robert Walser's Running With the Devil:
Power, Gender, and Madness in Heavy Metal Music, Hanover: Wesleyan
University Press, 1993, also refers to individuals' musical experience,
including quotes from fans' letters to music magazines, and the results of
a survey Walser conducted with fans at concerts. These results are in
summary form.
10 "Perspective Transformation: The Development of a Critical Method to
Introduce Learners to Computers." Master's degree in Adult Education, St.
Francis Xavier University, 1990; Science and Technology Careers Workshop,
Trent University 1987-1992.
11 For instance Clifford and Marcus, 1986; Sanjek, 1990; Minh-Ha, 1991;
Tedlock and Mannheim, 1995.
12 See for instance Anderson and Jack 1991; Shulamitz 1992.
13 Another author who influenced my Adult Education work during this
same period.
14 The enjoyment and challenge of unusual ways of writing is part of
the reason I am attracted to the writings of John Cage (1961), Trinh
Minh-Ha (1991) and Luce Irigaray (1991), as well as the school of
"ethnopoetics," particularly through the work of Dennis and Barbara
Tedlock (D. Tedlock 1972; D. and B. Tedlock 1975; B. Tedlock 1987; D.
Tedlock and B. Mannheim 1995).
15 Pegley, Karen. "'Justify Whose Love': Queer(y)ing the Reception of
Madonna." Conference Proceedings, International Association for the Study
of Popular Music, Havana Cuba, October 6-8, 1994. 16 The narrator from
Melville's Moby Dick (also the last line in Blue Lagoon by Laurie Anderson
is "call me Ishmael").
17 As in cartoon language accompanying superhero fights: "biff! boom!
bang!"
18 Information about the ages, genders, ethnicities, and compositional
backgrounds of respondents, as well as the locations of listening sessions
are summarized in Appendix E.
19 For further discussion of the issues of authority and identity
raised in this section, see the anthology edited by Judith Roof and Robyn
Wiegman, Who Can Speak? Authority and Critical Identity. Urbana, Illinois:
University of Illinois Press, 1995. For further discussions of
disciplinarity and interpretive communities, see the anthology edited by
David Schwarz, Anahid Kassabian, and Lawrence Siegel, Keeping Score:
Music, Disciplinarity, Culture. Charlottesville, Virginia: University
Press of Virginia, 1997.
20 I discuss Code's formulation of this phrase in Chapter Three,
"Knowing One's Place" (p. 3ff).
21 I note in Chapter One that the experience of hearing Westerkamp's
Cricket Voice had a galvanic effect on me, in fact transformed my life
quite fundamentally.
22 Three examples of learning situations are the fourth year Cultural
Studies course that I took with Jody Berland in 1983, which included a
field trip to New York City (where I met John Cage) and ended with a
multi-media performance; the first course that I took at York with James
Tenney which was about John Cage and led to my realization of Cage's
Circus On... score; and a fieldwork course with Beverley Diamond which
focused on my participation in a summer Computed Art intensive at Simon
Fraser University. Situations in which I have taught using this approach
include sessions at the Science and Technology Careers Workshop at Trent
University from 1989-1993 (see McCartney 1991).
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