1 INTRODUCTION
To consider the possibility of alternative histories, it is important to reconsider the existing histories and their sources. Where do the histories come from? The availability and accessibility and the choice of sources are an important aspect of the formation of music history. Analytical and historical accounts are often confined to music of which accessible documentation or audio(visual) recordings are available; this is a problem for music that does not fit into established formats or for which scores or standard audio(visual) recordings are not available (see, for example, Bosma 2006, 2013). The lack of available resources is not only a disadvantage with regard to contemporary accounts and analyses of such musical art; the long-term preservation of such music is also seriously problematic (see, for example, Canazza and Vidolin Reference Canazza and Vidolin2001; Battier Reference Battier2004; Roeder Reference Roeder2004, Reference Roeder2008; Bosma Reference Bosma2005, Reference Bosma2007, Reference Bosma2016a; Emmerson Reference Emmerson2006; Polfreman, Sheppard and Dearden Reference Polfreman, Sheppard and Dearden2006; Wetzel Reference Wetzel2006; Douglas Reference Douglas2007; Guercio, Barthélemy and Bonardi Reference Guercio, Barthélemy and Bonardi2007; Longton Reference Longton2007; Cuervo Reference Cuervo2008). It specifically affects music that has one or more of the following characteristics: interdisciplinary, exclusively performance-based, participatory, in the form of an installation, live electronic, improvised, with custom-made instruments or equipment. The availability and accessibility of historical sources is related to the preservation problematic; for electroacoustic music in particular, preservation is a complex problem. What is left of the past?
In this article, I will explore the relations between histories, sources and preservation problematics by evaluating how Dutch electroacoustic musical life is discussed in international histories of electronic music. Who are mentioned, and why? What aspects of their work are mentioned? Is the availability of musical sources, such as scores and recordings, important for the inclusion in or exclusion from historical accounts? I will start with the question about the kind of source materials used in some of the main historical overviews of electronic music. I will also discuss the focus of these histories and the selection criteria this implies, by tracing how Dutch music is represented in these histories. Then I will discuss some Dutch cases consisting of different generations of interdisciplinary, live, performance-based electroacoustic work: the work of Dick Raaijmakers, Michel Waisvisz and Huba de Graaff. How is their work represented in the main histories of electroacoustic music? What sources are available? How is their work preserved? These cases point to some important aspects of preservation and the formation of histories.
2 MUSIC HISTORIES
2.1 The focus of (electronic) music histories
Music history is different from most other forms of history. It has two faces, two functions. Music history not only gives an account of how things were in the past and how they developed, but also deals with the here and now: music histories are guides to how we listen to and perform music in the present. The music of the past is performed and listened to in the here and now; it is part of contemporary musical culture. We not only want to read about music of the past, but we also want to listen to it or perform it in the present. Therefore, primary musical sources that form the ‘music itself’, such as scores and recordings, have a double role: as sources on which historical accounts are based and as music that can be experienced in the present.
Donald Jay Grout stated in the preface to his third edition of A History of Western Music:
The history of music is primarily the history of musical style and cannot be grasped except by first-hand knowledge of the music itself. It is therefore essential to become acquainted with the sound of the music discussed […] and to be able to examine it more or less in its entirety. (Grout Reference Grout1980: xi)
For Grout, the music itself was so important that he had doubts about the merits of a music history:
‘Is not the music itself enough?’ How can writing about a composition’s history enhance what listeners hear? (Grout, quoted in Swift Reference Swift2011: 140)
Grout’s book is replete with descriptions of musical pieces and score examples. Moreover, the book is coupled with Palisca’s score source anthology. The later editions of A History of Western Music by Burkholder go with an anthology of recordings as well (Burkholder, Grout and Palisca Reference Burkholder, Grout and Palisca2014). Later music history books do focus more on cultural and political contexts than Grout’s early editions, but still devote much attention to the music itself, by way of descriptions, analyses and score examples: Robert Morgan’s Twentieth-century Music (Morgan Reference Morgan1991) is, like Grout’s work, accompanied by a musical score anthology; Taruskin (Reference Taruskin.2005) gives quite extensive analyses of key musical works, with printed score examples, as does Griffiths (Reference Griffiths1981).
Several books on electronic music contain historical overviews and discuss the development of electronic music more or less chronologically, although these books are not called ‘histories’ in their titles.Footnote 1 These electronic music histories have a different focus from the more general music history books: they deal not only with the music, but also, to a great extent, with the electronic music technology.Footnote 2 Electronic music history is to a large extent structured according to technological developments, whereas general music history books (such as Burkholder/Grout) are mainly structured according to time periods, geographical areas and musical styles, forms, traditions and developments, rather than, for example, dealing extensively with the technical aspects of musical instruments. Davies (Reference Davies2001) criticised the historical accounts of Western classical music for barely paying attention to musical instruments:
Musical instruments are always treated by non-specialists as the ‘poor relation’. Depending on the context, the normal focus is either on what is ultimately the only really important aspect, the sounding of music in performance, or else on the lives of its major composers and, especially in recent years, of its star performers. After these come other considerations, such as music’s written-down notation, the accuracy of surviving manuscripts and the different versions of a composition, the authentic manner of performing earlier music, and so on. Last of all are the sources of all the sounds, the instruments themselves, which are almost always taken for granted, apart from the occasional mention of a Stradivarius violin, a Ruckers harpsichord or a Steinway piano.
The general impression of Western musical instruments based on those that participate in the modern symphony orchestra (plus the piano, pipe organ, acoustic guitar and occasionally the saxophone) is that these are completely standardized and interchangeable. But this is by no means the case, and never has been[.] (Davies Reference Davies2001: 295)
For (experimental/avant-garde) live electronic art music, there is far less standardisation of electronic musical instruments than in classical Western art music; thus, it seems logical that there is more attention for the instruments (and their related technology) in the electronic music histories. However, Davies’s critique is to the point. Electronic music histories could learn from general Western art music histories to pay more attention to the music, but, inversely, electronic music histories may serve as an example for a different way of writing general music history.
2.2 The sources of (electronic) music histories
Music history books often do not mention all their sources precisely. (Since these books are often targeted at undergraduate students and interested readers, one may infer that too many references would make such books less accessible to such readers.) As a result, histories such as these seem an account of established facts instead of based on someone’s perception and interpretation of specific sources.
What kind of sources are the histories of electronic/electroacoustic music based on? The sources of the books on electronic music historyFootnote 3 mainly consist of books and articles, as well as liner notes, catalogues, manuals, and articles and interviews on websites. The books contain photographs, as well as diagrams, schematics and a few score excerpts. Chadabe (Reference Chadabe1997) in particular, but Holmes (Reference Holmes2016) as well, quotes personal communication with composers and other key figures, thus providing new source material. Music recordings figure in lists of recommended listening material,Footnote 4 but are seldom directly and specifically referenced as sources.Footnote 5 Remarkably, the histories of electronic music deal less with the music itself than the histories of Western art music: there are fewer musical descriptions, analyses and examples; the electronic music histories also deal with the technology and the culture around the technology (studios, institutes, groups).
Most music that is discussed more in depth in the electronic music histories is recorded music or well-documented music with scores and composers’ explanations such as compositions by Karlheinz Stockhausen and John Cage. All pieces of the Listening Guide and Listen Playlists of Holmes are compositions of which recordings are available. In Holmes’s Listening Guide, mostly tape music compositions are discussed. Tape music is easier to preserve than live electronic music (Bosma Reference Bosma2005; Emmerson Reference Emmerson2006).
The archiving and preservation of electroacoustic music is now well established for fixed format (‘tape’) works. […] The same cannot be said by a long way for ‘live electronics’. (Emmerson Reference Emmerson2006: 209)
Much preservation of tape music consists of stereo format recordings (Teruggi Reference Teruggi2004); and tape music is distributed in stereo format on CD releases.Footnote 6 Thus, preservation and availability of tape music may go hand in hand; and the availability of tape music recordings furthers its discussion in electronic music histories.
3 DUTCH ELECTRONIC MUSIC IN INTERNATIONAL HISTORIES
How is Dutch music represented in the histories of electronic music?
In the Netherlands, there is a variety of electroacoustic music: music for tape or other fixed media, live electronics, combined with classical acoustic instruments, as improvised music, sound art, installations, sound walks, electroacoustic music theatre, opera, applications for mobile devices, etc.Footnote 7 There are several conservatories where electronic music composition or technology can be studied. Besides, there is a rich avant-garde and experimental musical culture outside academia for composed and improvised music, often combined with electronics. Moreover, the Netherlands has been important with regard to the development of house, techno and dance music, which is currently a significant cultural export product (van Bergen Reference van Bergen2013).Footnote 8
However, in the histories of electronic music we can find very little on this.Footnote 9 What we do find is mainly related to pioneering studios:
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∙ the Philips studio (1956–60), where Varèse’s Poème Électronique was made, with associated composers Henk Badings, Dick Raaijmakers (as Kid Baltan) and Tom Dissevelt (Collins et al. Reference Collins, Schedel and Wilson2012: 83–4; Manning Reference Manning2013: 72, 148; Holmes Reference Holmes2016: 3, 95–7, 376–9, 474–6, 511);
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∙ the ensuing Institute of Sonology (mainly the period at Utrecht University, until 1986) and its associated composers and researchers, such as Gottfried Michael Koenig, Werner Kaegi and Stan Tempelaars, and the computer programmes and synthesis techniques they developed (Chadabe Reference Chadabe1997: 169–71, 241–2, 256, 280–3; Collins et al. Reference Collins, Schedel and Wilson2012: 122; Manning Reference Manning2013: 72, 129, 148–9, 203–6; Holmes Reference Holmes2016: 98, 298–9, 535);
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∙ the Studio for Electro-Instrumental Music STEIM (since 1969) and/or its director (since 1981) inventor-composer-performer Michel Waisvisz (1949–2008) (Chadabe Reference Chadabe1997: 228, 241–2; Collins et al. Reference Collins, Schedel and Wilson2012: 184; Manning Reference Manning2013: 454–5, 456; Holmes Reference Holmes2016: 284–5, 535).
This choice seems to be related to a focus on technological innovation and institutional structures instead of on musical or artistic developments.Footnote 10 In the following part of this article, I will take a closer look at some cases of Dutch electroacoustic music and speculate on why these were or were not included in the international histories of electronic music.
3.1 Dick Raaijmakers (1930–2013)Footnote 11
3.1.1 Dick Raaijmakers: work and documentation
Dick Raaijmakers, composer, artist, theorist, writer and teacher, was unique, remarkable and very influential in the Netherlands. His work is conceptually, musically and artistically profound and precise. His tape music, his musical performance art, his sound installations and his music theatre deal with the medium, with electroacoustic technology and with musical culture in a highly original and subversive way. For example, his Intona (1992) consists of various processes to destroy a microphone.Footnote 12 In Der Fall Leiermann (1991), based on Schubert’s song ‘Der Leiermann’, Raaijmakers turned an analogue tape on a reel-to-reel tape recorder by hand.Footnote 13 The three Ideofonen (1970) are large and technically complicated installations consisting of loudspeakers that generate their own sound.Footnote 14 Raaijmakers’s work is often interdisciplinary and related to the visual arts. Collaboration was an important aspect of his work, whether in student projects or in large music theatre productions.
Dick Raaijmakers’s attitude towards the preservation of his work was twofold. On the one hand, his performance and theatrical works were focused on the moment itself, both ideologically and practically, and they were the result of unique collaborations. On the other hand, Raaijmakers kept an elaborate personal archive. And when there was a good opportunity for documentation, he worked on it intensely, writing meticulously precise and elaborate texts, providing detailed drawings, etc. What he did not want was packaging his music in the standard format of a score that could be performed by anyone. Performances of his work were special events. His complete tape music, with a substantial booklet with elaborate documentation on the compositions, in Dutch with a complete English translation, was released as a CD box set in 1998 and rereleased in 2006 (The Complete Tape Music of Dick Raaijmakers 1998). His performance and music-theatrical works and his installations are far more difficult to document and disseminate, as they were focused on the unique moment. However, in 2007, an enormous book weighing three kilograms was published that extensively documented his music-theatrical and performance work and installations with text and photographs (Mulder and Brouwer Reference Mulder and Brouwer2007); the English translation appeared in 2008. And, while Raaijmakers was first resistant to re-performance (every performance is a new performance), at the end of his life several re-performance and re-installation projects were produced by people who had worked with him before. Moreover, after the publication of the Monograph Raaijmakers donated his archive to the Netherlands Music Institute in The Hague. In the last few years, the archive has been processed and taken care of at the Institute of Sonology of the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague, the Netherlands (Kees Tazelaar and Anne Wellmer).
3.1.2 Raaijmakers in the international histories of electronic music
Raaijmakers is mentioned in most of the above discussed histories of electronic music, but only as the co-author of the first electronic ‘pop music’ (Collins et al. Reference Collins, Schedel and Wilson2012: 84; Manning Reference Manning2013: 148; Holmes Reference Holmes2016: 474–6). When Raaijmakers worked at the Philips Natlab studio as technical assistant to Edgard Varèse, for Poème Électronique, he was asked by Philips to make some popular music to explore the commercial potential of the new electroacoustic equipment. He did so, between 1956 and 1963, in collaboration with jazz composer Tom Dissevelt, but not under his own name: as Kid Baltan (which is an anagram of Dick Natlab). This music was released on several records (1957, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1968) and attained a cult status. But for a long time, Dick Raaijmakers did not consider these ‘Popular Electronics’ part of his own oeuvre. In 2004, Raaijmakers’s and Dissevelt’s Popular Electronics were released, in close collaboration with Raaijmakers, as a CD box set with booklets providing extensive historical documentation (Popular Electronics 2004).Footnote 15
Remarkably, this side-path in Raaijmakers’s oeuvre is his only work that is mentioned in the international histories of electroacoustic music. Why? I can see several factors:
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∙ it was pioneering work, both technically and musically – the first popular electronic music;
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∙ it was already described early on (e.g. Prieberg Reference Prieberg1960);
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∙ the uniqueness and innovation of Raaijmakers’s subsequent work was not so much related to the invention of new technology, as to conceptual, artistic and musical work and to performance; while these histories are focused on ‘firsts’, on ‘beginnings’ and on technological innovation;Footnote 16
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∙ Dick Raaijmakers did not travel internationally and his work was seldom performed outside of the Netherlands;
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∙ a large and important part of his oeuvre consists of works that are uniquely bound to the specific occasion of its performance (in the Netherlands);
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∙ Raaijmakers’s texts were written in Dutch; during the majority of his career, English translations were not easily available;
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∙ the extensive documentation and release of recordings of his ‘serious’ electronic music and art came rather late in his career.
Thus, positive factors with regard to the inclusion of Kid Baltan/Dick Raaijmakers were: a focus of the histories on pioneers, novelties and technological progress; and the early availability of recordings of the Kid Baltan pieces. Negative factors with regard to Raaijmakers’s inclusion in international historical overviews of electronic music were: the late availability of the documentation of his other work; lack of an international network, related to location, travelling and language; and an apparent lack of interest of the electroacoustic histories in artistic and musical developments that do not promote technological innovation.
3.2 Michel Waisvisz (1949–2008)
3.2.1 Michel Waisvisz: work and documentation
One of the other few Dutchmen who are mentioned in the books on electronic music is Michel Waisvisz. He was director of the Studio for Electro-Instrumental Music (STEIM) in Amsterdam (since 1981) and he performed with his own electronic instruments or gestural controllers The Hands (Figure 1). He also developed other electronic instruments or interfaces, such as the analogue Crackle Box, the analogue Crackle Synth and the controller the Web; more controllers and software were also developed at STEIM.
The first version of The Hands was developed in 1984, just after the arrival of MIDI. It controlled a synthesiser (DX7, FM-synthesis). Later versions controlled more and different synthesisers, computers and samplers and MIDI sequences triggering synthesisers or sampler sounds. Later on, the software LiSa was developed at STEIM for live sampling and manipulating sounds and used with The Hands. This had great consequences for music and performance: different sounds, different sound structures and different interaction between the music and the sonic environment.Footnote 17 For example, with the live sampling feature, Michel Waisvisz played together with other musicians, sampling their sound during performance, as well as manipulating and developing it.
Waisvisz and his collaborators developed The Hands slowly. In interviews Waisvisz often stressed the importance of not changing the instrument all the time, but allowing himself time to learn the instrument and to develop his music.
By freezing the design modifications and extensions when The Hands were physically stable and durable, it became possible to focus on the musical intent beyond the novelty of the devices and engage in the aesthetic and musical considerations, rather than the technical details that lie behind the interface. (Torre and Andersen Reference Torre and Andersen2017: 134)
[I]t was through his commitment to build a practice around them over a long period of time and develop a unique and personal set of expressions and virtuosic skills, which instituted them as instruments for musical expression. (Torre and Andersen Reference Torre and Andersen2017: 135)
Thus, Michel Waisvisz took the musical aspect very seriously. An excerpt from his contribution to NIME 2006 illustrates this (Figure 2).
Waisvisz advocated an ideology of live performance, presence and touch. He refused to issue recordings of his work for a large part of his career (1978 to 2005). The music existed only in the here and now: you had to be there to experience it. Only at the end of his life were two CDs with his music released (Waisvisz 2005; Sehnaoui and Waisvisz 2008). (However, several video recordings and some radio recordingsFootnote 18 were made during his career.) There is little documentation of the technical aspects of his electromusical instruments: ‘Despite being often cited in the relevant literature, however, the documentation concerning the sensor architecture, design, mapping strategies, and development of these data gloves is sparse’ (Torre, Andersen and Baldé Reference Torre, Andersen and Baldé2016: 22).
Nevertheless, Waisvisz kept many things in his archive, such as photos, drawings, instruments, models, printed out code, posters, audio, video, software, etc., ‘in any format you can think of’, including all versions of The Hands and its software (Andersen Reference Andersen2016). Since his death in 2008, Michel Waisvisz’s partner Kristina Andersen, an artist and researcher herself, is taking care of Waisvisz’s archive. She notes that the documentation from the 1960s and 1970s, when storage media were expensive, thus forcing selection, is much better and easier to archive than the documentation from the 1980s and 1990s, with its problematic formats of digital storage. Moreover, in the 1980s photographs became self-made on low-quality cameras instead of by hired professional photographers. While at first Kristina Andersen was struggling with a systematic master plan for the archiving, she gradually came to realise that it would be important for Michel, for herself and for others involved, to ‘do the archiving in a living way’ (ibid.). This is both a strategy and a pragmatic approach. Projects are planned in cooperation with others, while visiting researchers come with their own requests. Publishing, getting it out into the world, has priority.Footnote 19
One such project is the remaking of the Crackle Synth. Two instruments have survived – one in working order, the other not – and there are some incomplete drawings. An old Crackle Synth was still being used, but it was malfunctioning; while for an instrument, it is essential that it can be played. Now three new Crackle Synths are being made, true to the original, but with updated components where possible. These are for three artists, ‘muses’,Footnote 20 who in the past have played an old Crackle Synth and will be using the new one in their future performances. The remaking of the Crackle Synth is being documented by drawings, photos, recordings and a report.
3.2.2 Michel Waisvisz in the international histories of electronic music
While Waisvisz’s Hands are often mentioned in the international overviews of electronic music, his music is not discussed at all.Footnote 21 For example, there is no mention of the difference between controlling a synthesiser or live sampling and its musical implications for sound, structure and performance practice. This neglect of Waisvisz’s music contrasts with the importance he himself attached to the musical aspect of his practice.
Why was Waisvisz so successful, being one of the few Dutch electroacoustic artists mentioned in these books? And why was his music neglected? I can identify several factors:
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∙ Michel Waisvisz had a good international network: he liked to travel, he liked the United States, he invited many international guest-artists to work at STEIM and he was a founding member of the NIME conference; STEIM’s website and presentations are in English; there was much interest in Waisvisz’s work in academia and in the United States; ‘it helped that he liked to talk and was approachable’ (Andersen Reference Andersen2016).
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∙ The emphasis in the books on technological innovation, on ‘beginnings’ and on electroacoustic musical instruments explains the interest for his first Hands and the disinterest in its subsequent development.
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∙ The lack of available documentation and recordings of his work may explain the neglect of his music.
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∙ STEIM and Waisvisz did not publish much, neither academic articles nor recordings; STEIM is not part of academia, hence there were no obligations to publish academic papers or books.
Thus, positive factors for the inclusion of Waisvisz in the electronic music histories were: the electroacoustic musical histories’ focus on pioneers, novelties and technological progress; and Waisvisz’s network. The electroacoustic musical histories’ apparent disinterest in the musical aspect of electronic music is a negative factor for the discussion of Waisvisz’s work. The lack of academic publications may explain the lack of detailed information on Waisvisz’s electromusical instruments in the books on electronic music.
3.3 Others: Huba de Graaff
There are many Dutch makers of electroacoustic music who are not mentioned in the books on electronic music discussed above. To give some established names: Tera de Marez Oyens (1932–96), Ton Bruynèl (1934–98), Roderik de Man (b. 1941), Jacob ter Veldhuis (b. 1951),Footnote 22 Huba de Graaff (b. 1959), René Uijlenhoet (b. 1961), Michel van der Aa (b. 1970), and many others. What these composers have in common is that they are not connected with a technical noveltyFootnote 23 or an institute and that the musical or artistic aspects are central in their work. They all often combine electroacoustic technology with acoustic musical instruments in a concert or music theatre setting. Here, I would like to focus on one of these composers, Huba de Graaff, not because she is representative of the others – her oeuvre is unique in many respects – but because in her work several issues come to the fore that are of essential significance in relation to history, sources and preservation.
Huba de Graaff is a composer who not only creates sounds and writes musical notation, but also makes her own electronic performance devices and theatrical concepts, in collaboration with others, mostly in the context of music theatre. Her oeuvre consists of about 85 works varying in length from one minute to one and a half hours, for solo voice or solo instrument, ensemble or orchestra, and mainly with diverse forms of electroacoustics.Footnote 24 Her work deals with sound technology and media in an ironic way and is often a playful reflection on existing technology and its function. Thus, it is not focused on the newest technology or on innovation in a linear, technological sense. An example is her music theatre work Lautsprecher Arnolt (2003), in which specially built loudspeakers function as personae, as dramatic objects and as theatrical props (Bosma Reference Bosma2013, Reference Bosma2014, Reference Bosma2016b).Footnote 25 Other works include a large-scale combination of performance and installation (Corenicken, 1991),Footnote 26 a sound dress (Japon Fuzz, 1991), a piezo grid sound installation (1992),Footnote 27 a media opera (De dood van Poppea, 2006),Footnote 28 and several theatrical-musical works.
With such elaborate music-theatrical productions with specifically built electroacoustic props, the preservation and dissemination of her work is highly problematic. Huba de Graaff tries to retain as much as possible of her old works and still has software, MIDI and audio files, old computers, some specific objects and some video recordings (de Graaff Reference de Graaff2016a). Nevertheless, a general lack of documentation is problematic for the preservation, re-performance and dissemination of her work. Problematic for preservation are:
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∙ the lack of a complete score;
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∙ the lack of complete documentation, technical and otherwise;
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∙ the storage of the objects – several have disappeared and there is a lack of storage space;
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∙ the specificity of the performers;
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∙ video registration (not high quality or not an adequate representation).
For example, what is left of Lautsprecher Arnolt that was last performed in 2005? There is a libretto. There are fragments of a score. Huba de Graaff retained all MIDI, Logic and audio files. There are photographs. There is a video registration, but she is not happy with its quality. Huba de Graaff personally kept the rotating speakers (see Figure 3) made and programmed by her, together with the Atari computer and software that controls the speaker, and a duplicate. (December 2016, the Dutch national Performing Arts Fund assigned funding to Huba de Graaff to develop a new work for these rotating speakers (de Graaff Reference de Graaff2016b); therefore, she must make sure that the speakers are working and programmable.) On the other hand, there is no complete score of Lautsprecher Arnolt. It is unclear where the other loudspeaker objects are; most loudspeaker objects are in a storage place of another theatre group and some have, without permission, been used for other productions. There is no high-quality video registration. There is little technical documentation.
Huba de Graaff has specific ideas about preservation, inspired by her re-performance, or re-construction, of Michael van Biel’s Jagdstück (1966) in 1985. She states that with this kind of music, re-performance is always a re-construction and a re-interpretation. Moreover, documentation is a re-interpretation in a different medium; to stress the importance of the medium, she quotes McLuhan’s slogan ‘the medium is the message’ – this is the reason that Huba de Graaff is not happy with the video recordings of her work. Huba de Graaff remarks that when she was younger, making more experimental works and feeling more insecure, she did not pay attention to the documentation and preservation of her work. However, being older now, feeling more secure and being more conscious about this problematic, she is documenting her work better (de Graaff Reference de Graaff2016a).
4 PRESERVATION AS PERFORMANCE
Live electronic music and electroacoustic music theatre and performance art are far more difficult to preserve than tape music or music for standard acoustic instruments notated in scores. In the cases discussed above, both artistic, ontological and practical considerations led to ideas and practices that I name ‘preservation as performance’. While one can argue that preservation is always performative, ‘doing’, both keeping and changing its objects, the music discussed here is particularly preserved through new performances, new installations and new publications that constitute re-constructions, re-uses and re-interpretations, ‘archiving in a living way’. Preservation as performance is not a standard procedure, but consists of special projects that relate both to the past and to new actors, new situations and new interpretations.
The term ‘preservation as performance’ makes clear the performative aspects of all preservation and history: these can and will only be brought about by acts that involve both repetition and change. While music is in itself already so ephemeral, it is important to take care of its sources and traces, that is, documentation in various ways – but without stifling and devitalising it. While other musical practices are or seem to be more standardised, traditional or communal than electronic music, and thus less prone to obsolescence, sooner or later they will encounter similar problems to those epitomised by electronic music. The only way for music to survive is by keeping it alive, in and through living, experiencing, thinking and practising bodies, based on traces of the past, enduring and vulnerable, effecting identity and change.
5 CONCLUSION
In comparison to histories of Western art music, histories of electronic music have a greater emphasis on technology and on technological innovation than on musical and artistic aspects. Histories of electronic music are very much about technologies, institutes and specific people: inventors and composers. Thus, for the inclusion in these histories, networks and personal communication are important. Another important aspect is the emphasis on inventions, on beginnings, rather than on musical, artistic and technical elaboration. There is also little attention for a critical, ironic or self-reflexive use of sound technology. The emphasis is on the invention or introduction of technologies, not on their subsequent useFootnote 29 or reception. Thus, essential aspects are not covered in these histories of electronic music.
It is noteworthy that the newest historical account discussed here, Collins et al. (Reference Collins, Schedel and Wilson2012), has in many respects a somewhat different orientation, discussing popular music, recent alternative trends such as electronica and interdisciplinary realms, and paying more attention to musical and sociocultural aspects as well, presenting electroacoustic technology more in context. It thus links to recent developments in sound studies, media studies and musicology.
An interesting inverse cross-influence could come from taking Davies’s critique on historical musicology from the perspective of electronic music seriously (Davies Reference Davies2001). Whereas electronic music histories fall short in their attention to the music itself, general histories of Western art music do not pay enough attention to the various forms, versions and generations of musical instruments, and the related technologies, as an essential part of musical culture and musical sound.
In order to pay more attention to the musical aspects, it is crucial to have more access to the music itself. However, for live electronics, interdisciplinary electroacoustic music theatre, installations, improvisations and so on, preservation beyond its unique performances is very problematic. The use of various analogue and/or digital electronic technologies, instruments and media, the intermingling of electronic music with various other disciplines (such as art, dance, theatre), the upheaval or stretching of the concept of the musical work and the departure from tradition causes new and serious problems to its preservation, such as early obsolescence of the experimental technology and a lack of standards. Moreover, a focus on the unique present, on decay, or on obsolete technology are often aesthetic features of such music, adding a reflexive layer to the problematics of preservation – this is also an essential aspect that makes it impossible to ‘freeze’ this musical art in time. Scores or recordings, if they exist at all, are not sufficient. The works and practices of Dick Raaijmakers, Michel Waisvisz and Huba de Graaff seem to resist documentation, ontologically and practically; but on the other hand, there is a desire for its documentation, dissemination and canonisation.
For the musical-artistic heritage of Dick Raaijmakers, Michel Waisvisz and Huba de Graaff, preservation means making something new while being faithful to the past. It is therefore that I propose to regard preservation as performance. To do so, it is important to find access to various manifestations of the work, to various sources and traces. This music only remains alive when we are not solely interested in linear innovation, but also in a profound relation with the past, in reworking the past.
Acknowledgement
This article is an elaboration of the author’s paper presented at the conference Alternative Histories of Electronic Music, London, 14 April 2016.