pickle wrote: ↑Tue Jan 14, 2020 8:45 pm
just to see if i'm reading you right, the moment one starts listening one is missing the point because listening is a more active than passive venture. hearing noise works. listening doesn't. something along these lines? i'm sure i've missed your point
You seem to be contrasting listening to hearing, which is not my point. My point is this, in some noise, some HNW (and ONLY some perhaps HNW xe2x80x93 Vomir and similar) SOUND is not important, not the thing. Sound is dependent of time, but a form which isn't dependent on sound has no need of duration. (This does NOT so radically apply to HN xe2x80x93 but might have consequences)
Such radical ideas are not new and exist elsewhere. Notably The Fountain, in which we have non-retinal art. A simple phrase- but in terms of what fine art and galleries were for and about- revolutionary. (A revolution some wish to ignore xe2x80x93 and understandably) I'll elaborate here, the impact of the fountain was profound, and at the exhibition where it first established its affect, it was in fact never exhibited!
The films of Warhol, such as Empire - 8 xc2xbd hours of nothing much happening xe2x80x93 the lights go on?! Does one need to watch the movie xe2x80x93 8 xc2xbd hours xe2x80x93 or simply see a still, or read a description. Later in the 70s 'The dematerialization of the Art object', latter still xe2x80x9cConceptual Poetryxe2x80x9d - i.e. poetry which in some cases need not be read. i.e. reading it or not makes no difference to the poems status qua poem, and would not help you to 'get it'.
Ergo xe2x80x93 HNW represents the same kind of thing. What was thought the essence of sound, duration, and an essence of music, is no longer essential.
The point then is maybe, 'but you do need to hear a bit'. Maybe. But if HNW is to have the same credentials as above non-retinal art xe2x80x93 non-cochlear sonic art (Seth Kim-Cohen ) need not be heard.
A particular Vomir release makes the point I think. A CD, a vinyl with 33 1/3 side A 45 rpm side B.
Sounds the same. Maybe an argument can be made to the effect one must at least listen to s short piece. Maybe, but that runs against the 'revolutionary' idea, or anti-idea. And leads to discussing of the sound quality of various HNW, and its length. A move back towards the significance of sound as duration. (Maybe the problematic of if not duration what then is sound? Nothing? ...an idea) Those who see music as organised sound and sound as duration, and the appreciation of such in ones reactions to this, enjoyment, maybe needn't bother with such questions.
Anyway xe2x80x93 i've gone on far too much already. But if you read the thread you see i'm caught between the devil and the deep blue sea. I'm either too sketchy and authoritative, or TLDR.
pickle wrote: ↑Tue Jan 14, 2020 8:45 pm
and no doubt the point but here i'd like to invoke T. Mikawa noise guy via T. Riley ambient guy whose aims included assisting the listener in losing sense of time. without a sense of time or say relative position or self the point fades. here i'd suggest that one can probably go in hard, listening real freaking hard, hard as freaking hell with all kinds of hardass points and pointed reasons and such but end up losing sense of time, of perspective, position. and then accidentally getting the point without having there intended. damn! so then perhaps the possibility of both getting and missing the point, perhaps not at the same time but during the same listening session. as for correct and precise duration, i can say that at least as far as riley apparently lengthy duration is key to the process of eroding the sense of time.
If the Riley here is the Terry of in C and Poppy Nogood, i'm very familiar to this stuff. It blew me away on first hearing at college in 1970. I did wince at xe2x80x9c ambient guyxe2x80x9d - that with respect, that is Brian Eno. Riley was considered a minimalist, but no matter, and sure I actually said such works, like drones (they are not) have the feeling of extended temporality until time ceases. His concerts lasted all night.... And you talk of 'hard listening' for sure. Became xe2x80x9cDeep Listeningxe2x80x9d (The Deep Listening Band - Pauline Oliveros)... Charlemagne Palestine et al.
Not my point at all, though amazing stuff.
pickle wrote: ↑Tue Jan 14, 2020 8:45 pm
perhaps the point is undeserving of the definite article though The Rita certainly thought otherwise. don't see any hnw project with the name A Rita getting props. still this stuff with riley and time and such in relation to The Almighty Point chafes a bit insofar as it can come across as somewhat dogmatic can it not?
Sorry, I cant follow this last bit. I do see traces of aesthetic in Sam McKinlay's work, but traces.
And this is already far too long and far far too long for some...