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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 April 2025
This article examines the work of the composer Michelle Lou through its affective and formal mechanisms. I propose that Lou’s work has consistently retained a fundamental and specific orientation towards the listener, which I describe as distance or proximity. In addressing three works spanning eight years – Opening (2008), untitled three-part construction (2014) and HoneyDripper (2016) – I show how the idea of distance informs and is articulated through orchestration, gestural and phrasal construction, scenography and form, and thus frames one’s experience of sound, spatiality, memory, time and perception. While the sounds and materials employed by Lou are often formally cold and sonically abrasive, I argue that her work ultimately implicates and invites the listener in as a crucial element of its sonic ecology, even enacting a sort of phenomenological care over the listener.
1 Cixin Liu, Death’s End, trans. Ken Liu (New York: Tor Books, 2016), p. 243.
2 See, for example, Foreman’s Paradise Hotel (1998) (Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press, 2001) or Old-Fashioned Prostitutes (A True Romance) (2013); see review by Ben Brantley, ‘At the Scrim of Memory, Reality Itself’, New York Times, 7 May 2013, https://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/08/theater/reviews/richard-foremans-old-fashioned-prostitutes.html (accessed 5 December 2024).
3 From the composer’s own description of this material in the performance instructions for the piece. Michelle Lou, untitled three-part construction (Edition Gravis, 2015), p. 3.
4 ‘About Us’, Ontological-Hysteric Theater website, www.ontological.com/history.html (accessed 6 March 2020).
5 Cixin Liu, Death’s End.