The Human Still Lives? Technology, Borrowing and Agency in the Music of Nicolas Collins

Author:

Dyer Mark1

Affiliation:

1. Royal Northern College of Music Manchester, United Kingdom

Abstract

This paper considers aspects of late 20th Century experimental music in a post-digital era, where DIY approaches of hacking now outdated digital technology have enabled new forms of artistic expression – namely, glitch and aesthetics of failure. More specifically, it will examine American composer Nicolas Collins’ approach to hacking portable CD players as a means to imitate sound production methods of turntable artists from the 1980s, in such works as Still Lives (1992). The paper will then explore Collins’ attempt to orchestrate this work for acoustic instruments using open musical notation in Still (After) Lives (1997). This discussion is viewed through the lens of musical borrowing, tracing Collins’ material – a canzone by Giuseppe Guami – through its varying mediums and guises, highlighting the limitations of technology and notation as a means to rearticulate a musical fragment and the fruitful artistic avenues this opens. Through the examination of a musical material, the paper goes on to scrutinize the entanglement between human, material and machine agents. I propose that understandings of such practices might be extended from the post-digital to the post-human: a collaborative network of agentic ‘things’.

Publisher

INSAM Institute for Contemporary Art, Music and Technology

Subject

General Medicine

Reference25 articles.

1. Andrews, Ian. 2002. “Post-digital Aesthetics and the return to Modernism.” MAP-UTS lecture, 2002. Accessed 9th July 2018. http://ian-andrews.org./texts/postdig.pdf.

2. Beaudoin, Richard. 2010. “You’re There and You’re Not There: Musical Borrowing and Cavell’s ‘Way’.” Journal of Music Theory 54, no. 1 (Spring): 91–105.

3. Bennett, Jane. 2010. Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things. Durham: Duke University Press.

4. Bolton, Michael S. 2014. “Digital Parasites: Reassessing Notions of Autonomy and Agency in Posthuman Subjectivity.” Theoria & Praxis 1, no. 2: 14–26.

5. Bowen, José A. 1993. “The History of Remembered Innovation: Tradition and Its Role in the Relationship between Musical Works and Their Performances.” The Journal of Musicology 11, no. 2 (Spring): 139–173.

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