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The Musical Text: Theorizing Openness after Structuralism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2023

SAM RIDOUT*
Affiliation:
Independent writer, London, UK
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Abstract

This article attends to the conjuncture in the early 1970s of post-Cagean musical practice and poststructuralist theory associated with the journal Musique en jeu and the music department of the Centre universitaire expérimental de Vincennes. Reading the theoretical writing of figures including Daniel Charles and Ivanka Stoïanova alongside the music of Costin Miereanu, the article elaborates the account of the open work that emerges there, before turning to an LP by Miereanu, Luna cinese (1975), which grapples with the aporetic figure of the open record and in so doing takes the ‘openness’ of post-Cagean experimentalism in new directions. In conclusion, I begin to theorize what Miereanu's open record suggests about the listening that records call for and the fixity of records in general.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

In the years after 1970, a novel confluence formed between avant-garde musical composition inspired by such figures as John Cage, Karlheinz Stockhausen, and Dieter Schnebel on the one hand, and the radical edge of structuralist thought being developed by Roland Barthes, Julia Kristeva, and Jacques Derrida on the other. Associated with the journal Musique en jeu, founded in 1970 by Dominique Jameux, and the music department of the Centre universitaire expérimental de Vincennes, figures including Daniel Charles and Ivanka Stoïanova sought to bring the disruptive encounter of structuralist linguistics and literary criticism to bear on the discipline of musicology.Footnote 1 As Charles and Stoïanova saw it, their theoretical innovations were necessitated by changes in musical practice associated above all with the post-Cagean avant-garde, which put in question such central theoretical and practical objects as the musical work and the composer. This project might be characterized as an attempt to mediate two forms of ‘openness’: that of the musical work as practised or placed under erasure by the music of the American and European post-war avant-gardes, and that of the text as it emerged in the poststructuralism of Barthes, Kristeva, and Derrida.

Charles had been close to the centre of the western European musical avant-garde since the late 1950s, having studied with Olivier Messiaen, been associated with the Groupe de recherches de la musique concrète, and developed a particular critical specialism in the music of Cage.Footnote 2 Stoïanova, on the other hand, was a musicologist who had studied in her native Sofia and in Moscow before joining her older sister Julia Kristeva in Paris in 1970, where she began doctoral studies with Charles.Footnote 3 Charles's and Stoïanova's theoretical speculation was not divorced from practice, and the composer with whom they were most closely in conversation from the early 1970s was the Romanian Costin Miereanu. Miereanu attended the national conservatoire in Bucharest in the early years of the Ceaușescu regime, a period marked by a degree of liberalization and cultural interchange with the West. Exposed to the western European avant-garde both during his studies and at international events such as the Music Biennale Zagreb, by 1967 Miereanu's music had received performances in western Europe. Between 1967 and 1969, Miereanu attended the Darmstadt Ferienkurse für Neue Musik, which from the early 1950s had enjoyed a reputation as the central hub of the European musical avant-garde, though by the late 1960s that centrality was fading.Footnote 4

It was at Darmstadt in 1968 that Miereanu participated in a workshop directed by Stockhausen that he would later describe as ‘the most important turning-point of [his] career’.Footnote 5 Having led a similar workshop the previous year devoted to graphic notation, in 1968 Stockhausen turned to Textkomposition, a form he had recently adopted consisting of written instructions for performers inflected by an Eastern meditative mysticism.Footnote 6 Where, as contemporary observers such as Heinz-Klaus Metzger noted, such looseness did not by any stretch of the imagination necessarily entail any troubling of the ‘dictatorship of the composer’, for Miereanu Textkomposition, once assimilated to a lineage that stretched back to the New York school of Cage, Christian Wolff, La Monte Young, and others, afforded a radical social critique of not just the performance situation but also the object of musical discourse in general.Footnote 7

As Miereanu put it:

The importance, though provisional, of this type of compositional attitude resided in the search for another writing, which also means placing in question the traditional status of the musician, traditional, elitist artistic circuits, and the search for another status of the musician in line with the desiderata of the soixante-huitards.Footnote 8

This conception of the indeterminate practices of the musical avant-garde as a social critique had been available in Europe at least since Metzger's 1959 exegesis of Cage's Concert for Piano and Orchestra, which understood Cage's piece to problematize the conception of the score as a neutral intermediary between a composer's intention and an interpreter and, crucially, to offer a glimpse of a world ‘emancipated from the principle of domination’.Footnote 9 Even before Miereanu moved to Paris in the months following May 1968, a set of concerns – a preoccupation with writing, a critique of the author-composer, and a commitment to ideals of democratization – are discernible that would soon be articulated to the paradigm of the text.Footnote 10 In 1970, Miereanu pursued his engagement with the field of structuralism and began studies at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales with A J. Greimas.Footnote 11

The open text

Miereanu's arrival in Paris coincided more or less closely with that of the theoretical object termed ‘the text’. Barthes characterizes this historical moment succinctly in the opening sentence of ‘From Work to Text’, in 1971: ‘It is a fact that over the last few years a certain change has taken place (or is taking place) in our conception of language and, consequently, of the literary work which owes at least its phenomenal existence to this same language.’Footnote 12 A radicalization of the structuralist adoption of linguistics as a pilot science, that is, an ‘ultrastructuralism’, as François Dosse terms it, necessitated a reconception of the object in question.Footnote 13 If, for example, the literary object is not so much the repository of an author's ideas and intentions that are recovered in the act of reading as a moment in a field, its sense deriving from a differential network of linguistic mechanisms that are social rather than individual, then the edges of the work must necessarily fray. If works of art are not organic, discrete unities but are instead jostled by and interwoven with other texts, the bounded object of conventional literary criticism finds itself in some difficulty (and not only this: the sociogenesis of the categories that make sense of these objects entails that they too are similarly unstable).Footnote 14 In S/Z, published in 1970, Barthes's opposition between the ‘readerly’ and the ‘writerly’ had not just diagnosed but celebrated a certain openness or indeterminacy in the literary object, such that ‘writing’ is no longer the exclusive preserve of the author.Footnote 15

Openness and indeterminacy had, of course, been watchwords of the European musical avant-garde since the late 1950s. The experiments of Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen with mobile forms, in which composed units can be navigated freely by the performer, inspired in part by the literary precedents of Stéphane Mallarmé's Un Coup de dés and James Joyce's Finnegan's Wake (working title: Work in Progress) are significant here, but it is perhaps above all the figure of John Cage that placed the concept of the work in question for avant-garde musicians in the late 1950s and 1960s.Footnote 16 By the middle of the 1960s, a cluster of terms – non finito, open work, work in progress, informal – were the common currency of music critical discourse. In Heinz-Klaus Metzger's account of Concert for Piano and Orchestra, Cage is read as ‘dissolving … critically’ the ‘traditional concept of the work of art’.Footnote 17 Cage, he suggests, replaces the work as object with the work as ‘praxis, process, action’.Footnote 18

Umberto Eco's canonical account of the ‘open work’ from 1960, which takes Luciano Berio's Sequenza I (1958), Boulez's Third Piano Sonata, Henri Pousseur's Scambi (1958), and Stockhausen's Klavierstück XI as examples, reiterates the connection between these practices and the aesthetics of Mallarmé and Joyce. However, Eco generates a concept of the open work that, despite its echoes of Metzger's thematic of freedom, arguably excludes such pieces as Cage's, insisting on an essential identity that contains its variants or to which the variants refer. The open work according to Eco is thus very much still a work.Footnote 19 This is a point made by Daniel Charles in 1965, who writes that ‘[i]f Boulez's works have become increasingly “open”, therefore, this has been in order that they might be less “aleatory”’; the ‘open work’ is ‘open, but a work’ (in contrast, ‘for Cage, what “opens” is the non-work’).Footnote 20 Charles takes the varying attitudes of Boulez and Iannis Xenakis towards Cage as the starting point for a critique of Boulez's joint commitment to formalism and the ‘autonomy of the work of art’, a call for a flattening of the distinction, not yet articulated in a poststructuralist vocabulary, between the ‘esthetic’ and the ‘artistic’.Footnote 21

Through the 1960s, a host of musical practices had developed – from graphic and text scores to free improvisation, multimedia happenings, and scratch orchestras – that consolidated the rhetorical and practical link between ‘performative freedoms, collaborative creative processes, and audience participation’ and ‘the antiauthoritarian and democratizing movements of the era’.Footnote 22 Charles, following the line of argument set up by Metzger, interpreted the Cagean open work as a reversal of the disconnection between musical activity and ‘labouring society’ that the post-war acolytes of Webern had taken to new extremes.Footnote 23 The traditional composer ‘domesticates chance, to better domesticate the performer’ in a dynamic that Charles describes in tellingly Freudo-Marxian terms as ‘the interiorisation of repression’.Footnote 24 As such, by the time that Miereanu arrived in Paris, the compositional techniques that were central to his practice – text scores, graphic scores, and electronic music – were invested with great theoretical and political significance.

The account of Textkomposition (a term that for Miereanu encompassed text scores in a limited sense along with other non-normative forms of notation) developed by the Vincennes milieu began with the conceptual framework established by writers such as Metzger. Practices such as Cage's, they agreed, necessitated thinking in terms of processes and actions rather than musical works or fixed objects. New experimental notation practices problematized the conception of writing as the communication of a composer's intention to a performer, and granted composer and performer something like equal status. Miereanu had begun to develop a theoretical account of Textkomposition shortly after the 1968 Darmstadt workshop.Footnote 25 In 1967 and 1968, Cage's aesthetics were described by Charles in terms of eternal flux and the Zen contemplation of nothingness, drawing primarily on the writing of Heinz-Klaus Metzger and Theodor Adorno, the reluctant patron philosopher of the Darmstadt of the 1950s whose writings dominated critical accounts of avant-garde music into the 1970s.Footnote 26 After the arrival in Paris of Stoïanova in 1970, however, a new paradigm inflected the thinking of Charles and Miereanu, one indebted to the lively theoretical writing associated with the journal Tel Quel, and above all to the work of Julia Kristeva. A cluster of essays published in Musique en jeu between 1973 and 1975 by Charles, Stoïanova, and Miereanu, while the latter two were both colleagues and doctoral students of the former at Vincennes, began to theorize contemporary musical practices in terms of a musical énoncé, a productivity emerging from the encounters between codes and a primordial, pre-logical, and pre-individual topos of drives and dreamwork.Footnote 27

The hinges of this turn are particularly perceptible in ‘L’écriture et le silence’, published in 1973. Taking up Metzger's Adornian suggestion that Cage's Concert for Piano and Orchestra rejects a capitalist logic of evaluation and reproduction of objects, Charles draws on the Marxian semiotics of Kristeva and Jean Baudrillard to suggest that something like a productivity outside of the circulation of exchange and use values and signs might be in play: it ‘adds nothing “valuable” to the world’.Footnote 28 Cage's silences are understood by Charles to pass from an ‘empty’ silence ‘thought in terms of exchange and the communication of a meaning or value’ to a ‘“full”, “positive”, noisy’ silence, one that might escape from communication and discourse. Cage's silence thus entails a confrontation with a background noise, with the inarticulate enabling conditions of meaning, a ‘productivity prior to value’.Footnote 29 Charles's description of writing as ‘noise tracing itself’ appears to echo Barthes's ironic riffs on communication theory in S/Z, in which he writes about a form of writing that ‘stages a certain “noise” … is the writing of noise, of impure communication’.Footnote 30

The simple displacement effected by Charles of the literary object of Kristeva's early work is remarkably generative. As Kristeva claims of literature when approached with the apparatus of semiotics, for Cage ‘music’ does not exist. A semiotic perspective affirms the irreducibility of ‘music’ to ‘the object of normative musicology’.Footnote 31 The noisy, interferential preconditions of musical sense that are silenced by conventional musicology are articulated by Charles in terms of Nature, and are thus connected both to a Marxian account of the labour process and to the maxim attributed by Cage to Ananda Coomaraswamy (‘art is the imitation of nature in her manner of operation’). Perhaps more fruitfully, however, this noisiness also comes to refer to the inscription of bodies, and socially organized bodies, within the musical text, a move that refuses the identification of the musical with the sonorous and allows Charles to draw Barthes's essay ‘Le grain de la voix’, which had been published in Musique en jeu two issues previously and is itself in conversation with the work of Kristeva, into his account.Footnote 32

Musical text/textual music

Two issues later, an issue of Musique en jeu dedicated to graphic notation reflected the shared account of indeterminate notation being developed by Charles, Stoïanova, and Miereanu. Miereanu's contribution, titled ‘Textkomposition: voie zéro de l’écriture musicale’, invokes in its title both Barthes's theorization of a colourless, styleless writing and Kristeva's citation of Linnart Mäll's semiotic studies of Buddhism.Footnote 33 The fundamental move of Textkomposition, Miereanu argues, is an opening up of compositional practice to the ‘extra-musical’ (a term that does not remain unproblematized), including ‘painting, poetry, linguistics, exact sciences, environment [in the artistic sense derived from Allan Kaprow], the art of gesture, mass media’.Footnote 34 As such, this practice represents an ‘inter-media’ in which different signifying codes displace one another. As such, the communicative function that had governed traditional music until the birth of musical modernism is renounced, in favour of, quoting Kristeva, a ‘continuous reflection, a written contestation of code, of the law and of oneself’.Footnote 35 Textkomposition, they argue, brings to light the ‘kinesis of sense always in the process of formation’, what Kristeva terms signifiance, a ‘transformative semiotic practice’.Footnote 36

Against an idealist model of the fixed, closed work, Miereanu and Stoïanova posit the musical text as ‘a synthetic language, within several superimposed languages, conveyed by a multitude of open codes, infinite and irreducible in relation to one another; it is located … at the point of encounter between different semiotic systems’.Footnote 37 This text is structured by what Stoïanova terms ‘discontinuous connotations’ (a metonym of Derrida's ‘nonsynonymous substitutions’), such that ‘there is no immobile textual presence, there is no fixed material that could be susceptible to a “translation without loss” or addition’.Footnote 38 As a consequence, practices such as Miereanu's do not aspire to different or more precise forms of communication by, say, representing pitch or amplitude graphically. Rather, they refuse the goal of correspondence or faithful translation between signifying systems. Stoïanova's description of ‘a drive, a clearing, an energy becoming textual music and musical text, figural gesture and gestural writing [graphie], printed dance and audible dance, read music and heard music’ does not, therefore, reflect a monist synesthesia but a conception of a field traversed by slippages, breaks and tensions.Footnote 39 Drawing on Kristeva's account of poetic language and the signifying process, Miereanu and Stoïanova argue that indeterminate notation practices bring the social, material, and psychoanalytic preconditions of musical meaning to bear on the production of musical sense in a way that both makes those preconditions apparent and renders strange and unstable the relation of subjects to representational and communicative musical signification.Footnote 40

As opposed to Metzger's account of Cage's Concert for Piano and Orchestra, the openness of the open work for Miereanu and Stoïanova is not a question of individual liberties or a democracy of conscious subjects: ‘it does not have to do with alternatives or with choice’.Footnote 41 Instead, subjectivity is put into question – ‘on trial’/‘in process’, as Kristeva has it – in a way that reflects a particularly countercultural syncresis of Zen, mysticism, Freud, and psychedelia.Footnote 42 Miereanu speaks of an attitude of inspiration, ‘of intuition, of premonition, of dream, of the symbolic, of a non-linear logic’, while Stoïanova invokes the ‘ahistorical temporality of “drugged” consciousness’.Footnote 43

Luna cinese: the open record

Such an openness is put to the test by the form of the record, a form with which Miereanu first experimented in 1975.Footnote 44 Miereanu's Luna cinese was published on the Italian record label Cramps Records, founded by Gianni Sassi, Sergio Albergoni, and Gianni Emilio Simonetti in 1973. This label emerged from a countercultural scene that drew together New Left politics and diverse forms of aesthetic experimentation including progressive rock, free improvisation, jazz, and avant-garde composition. Simonetti, who curated the nova musicha series within which Luna cinese appeared, was an admirer of Cage and Fluxus who sought to foster a politically committed experimentalism indebted to Situationism.Footnote 45 Miereanu was thus in appropriate company in a series that had been inaugurated with a record dedicated to Cage's music (including the first commercial recording of 4ʹ33ʺ) and went on to include the political songs of Cornelius Cardew and the Gruppo di Improvvisazione Nuova Consonanza.

The disc represents an attempt to reconcile the conception of the open work developed from the early 1970s with the form of the record. As Miereanu notes, ‘the purely sonic fixity of the disc’ was starkly opposed to the expanded conception of music that he and his associates had struggled to forge.Footnote 46 When compared with the radical indeterminacy of a piece such as Dans la nuit des temps (1969), a record differs little from iteration to iteration. As Cage, whose shadow looms large over Luna cinese, put it, records ‘destroy one's need for real music … [and] make people think that they're engaging in a musical activity when they're actually not’.Footnote 47 Miereanu was not alone in pondering the contradiction between the open works of the musical avant-garde in the 1950s and 1960s and the fixity of the LP.Footnote 48 Around 1970, recordings of mobile works by Stockhausen and André Boucourechliev had opted to include multiple renditions of the piece on one LP, a solution perhaps suited to the Eco-influenced – rather than Cagean – openness that these works adopted.Footnote 49 Theodore Strongin, in a 1968 review of a record by Max Neuhaus suggestively titled ‘When the Listener Is Composer’, posits an openness that is more resonant with that of the text, conceiving of listening as a form of ‘composition’ or ‘realization’ that prefigures Barthes's formulation of the writerly text.Footnote 50

Luna cinese, in a subtle rejoinder to Cage, suggests that to listen to records is in fact to engage in a musical activity (a point that is perhaps suggested by works of Cage's such as the Imaginary Landscape series). Miereanu's solution to the aporia of the open record approached the record as a ‘socio-cultural object’, terming it a ‘manipulable disc’ (disque-à-manipuler) and suggesting multiple ways of listening to the record's two sides (labelled ‘side X or Y’ and ‘side Y or X’): by looping different copies of the record, for example, or overlaying the same or different sides and manipulating the volume controls on different record players.Footnote 51 Miereanu insists that ‘Luna cinese should be understood less as a finished object, as a final result, signature, initials and visiting card of the composer, and instead as a material, as the point of departure for a second realisation’.Footnote 52

This succeeds in producing a piece that is, on one level, remarkably similar to the insufficiently open work as theorized by Eco, which ‘always falls back on an aesthetic object in the image of the fixed, traditional work’.Footnote 53 The piece in many ways recalls the recordings of another Parisian admirer of Cage, Luc Ferrari, combining fragments of speech in different languages, recordings of everyday noises and soundscapes, arranged through long duration, scarcely perceptible loops. Organized in parallel, autonomous layers, the materials include ‘recipes, nursery rhymes, outpourings of disordered memories [and] mental transcription of discussions that actually occurred or are simply imagined’. The cumulative effect is of a generalized stasis, ‘the “woven” silence of the mountains’ interspersed with the ‘intense noise of big cities’.Footnote 54 This ‘stasis of the present moment’ reflects the influence of Cage's music and its static surfaces made up of a multitude of events.Footnote 55 Miereanu's aims for the piece reflect a by now familiar preoccupation with the signifying process, with the short circuits and arbitrary connections that precede sense: he hoped that these procedures might produce a ‘surrealism in the natural or unconscious state’. Side X or Y follows the emergence of the title from nonsense, a ‘production process of sense, a “tracing” or nascent process’ in much the same way that Miereanu's graphic scores were understood to set in play and foreground the emergence of musical sense.Footnote 56

The piece's emphasis on stasis, its refusal of teleological narrative (especially if manipulated in the manner that Miereanu suggests), and its formal reliance on repetition can be fruitfully placed alongside the account of American minimalist music published by Stoïanova in 1977, which fleshes out the relationship between experimental musical practices and listening subjects that is implicit in her earlier writing on the European avant-garde. At its core, Stoïanova's claim is that the repetitive music of composers such as Philip Glass, Terry Riley, and Steve Reich, in scrambling the communicative, interpellative mechanisms of conventional tonal music, ‘offers up instances of undirected and uncontrollable identification’.Footnote 57 Its anti-functionalist use of repetition – marking its distance from the architectonic organization of earlier tonal music – derives from:

a desubjectivation of the sound énoncé. Contrary to the conventional practice in which the artist (author, performer) places himself temporarily in the work, which follows the flow of interiority, the tale of a subject (even a subject ‘on trial/in process’), the repetitive statement annuls any subject of enunciation in the name of the repetitive play which has become the sole master of the situation.Footnote 58

What Stoïanova seems to be positing here is an openness that is no longer so closely and exclusively tied to the sorts of indeterminate notations that had occupied her, Charles, and Miereanu for the preceding years. As John Mowitt writes, Stoïanova's ‘commitment to the textual paradigm is meant to authorize her insistence upon the interpellative heterogeneity of music when the latter is comprehended as a social apparatus’.Footnote 59 Mowitt pushes Stoïanova perhaps a little further than she intends but nevertheless in a direction that is fruitful: rather than this openness being a special characteristic of the avant-garde, he argues that implicit in Stoïanova's argument is the openness or textuality of music in general.Footnote 60

Luna cinese can be understood in these terms, its openness having as much to do with its openness to multiple identifications, its flat, directionless surface, in which ‘the listener is no longer forced to follow the story of a narrative development, but can wander at will, abandoned to his fantasies’, as with the record's appropriation of the mobile forms of Stockhausen or Boulez.Footnote 61 It is here that the extreme states of consciousness that Miereanu and Stoïanova invoke can be integrated into their project of a psychoanalytically informed semiotics of music: in these states the constitution of subjectivity is shaken and its preconditions become perceptible.

In an essay from 1977, titled ‘Listening’, Barthes posits a listening implied by Cage's music, one that appears to elaborate the account of listening and the subject developed by Stoïanova. Barthes sets out a ‘modern’, post-psychoanalytic mode of listening that is centreless, ‘evenly hovering’.Footnote 62 As opposed to a hermeneutic listening, which seeks to decode, Barthes's listening is an open, liberated one which ‘circulates, which permutates, which disaggregates, by its mobility, the fixed network of the roles of speech’. This listening is involved in a social transformation, in which ‘the sites of speech are less and less protected by the institution’.Footnote 63 Such a listening, then, does not uncover hidden meanings in a crudely psychoanalytic sense, but picks up on the signifying process, ‘the unconscious texture’ that constitute the enabling conditions of sense.Footnote 64 The concluding gesture of Barthes's essay aligns Cage's music with this hovering attention, an auto-deconstructive listening, and bears a strong resemblance to the account of indeterminate music as a music that brings the signifying process to bear on musical practice developed by Stoïanova, Charles, and Miereanu:

what is listened to here and there … is not the advent of a signified, object of a recognition or of a deciphering, but the very dispersion, the shimmering of signifiers, ceaselessly restored to a listening which ceaselessly produces new ones from them without ever arresting their meaning: this phenomenon of shimmering is called signifying [signifiance, a term Barthes had borrowed from Kristeva], as distinct from signification: ‘listening’ to a piece of classical music, the listener is called upon to ‘decipher’ this piece, i.e. to recognize (by his culture, his application, his sensibility) its construction, quite as coded (predetermined) as that of a palace at a certain period; but ‘listening’ to a composition (taking the word here in its etymological sense) by John Cage, it is each sound one after the next that I listen to, not in its syntagmatic extension, but in its raw and as though vertical signifying: by deconstructing itself, listening is externalized, it compels the subject to renounce his ‘inwardness’.Footnote 65

Barthes recapitulates the account of the open work as a practice that abandons the paradigm of communication in favour of articulating the noisy texture from which sense emerges. Such a shimmering, hovering listening is solicited by Luna cinese.

Luna cinese suggests that the form of listening theorized by Barthes and Stoïanova has a significant relationship with the record. This is a listening, then, that takes ‘into account an increasing instrumentation of listening (by radio, tape, recordable CD, sampler, etc.)’ and suggests, with Peter Szendy, ‘that it is listeners who make music’.Footnote 66 Indeed, Luna cinese stages Szendy's claim for ‘listening as arrangement’. If, as Szendy argues, the listening proper to the musical work is a structural listening as theorized by Adorno, then the improper listening associated with radio, tape, record, and so on would be a distracted, wavering one without a centre.Footnote 67 Adorno's disagreements with Walter Benjamin over the status of distraction turn on the potentialities of mass culture with which Miereanu and his peers were grappling, in which such forms as cinema initiate a ‘shattering’ of tradition, the ‘choral work’ might be ‘enjoyed in a private room’.Footnote 68 Benjamin's mechanical reproducibility essay is a spectral presence through Adorno's writing on technology and culture, including, perhaps, in his formulation of a lacunary listening in a late article on the long-playing record. The LP, for Adorno, is a manipulable disc. It invites intervention by the once passive listener, affording interruptions, repetitions, and the isolation of fragments, in which the needle (over)punctuates, as Szendy might say, the text, generating a form of musical listening that is perhaps not quite distracted, but certainly decentred: ‘comparable to reading, to the immersion in a text’.Footnote 69

Just as the conception of the open, textual musical énoncé was, as Stoïanova put it, ‘imposed by the very practice of … musical enunciation as it asserts itself in modernity’, troubling the musical object in general, so Miereanu's ‘manipulable disc’ troubles the association of the record with fixity and deadness. In the light of Luna cinese, a host of records that foreground their openness comes into view, such as Brian Eno's Discreet Music (1975), a record whose origin story involves the unusually quiet playback of an LP, and Augustus Pablo and King Tubby's King Tubbys Meets Rockers Uptown (1976).

Coda

Nicholas Cook's 2013 book Beyond the Score: Music as Performance opens with an invocation of the text. Quoting Barthes's ‘The Grain of the Voice’, first published in Musique en jeu, Cook writes that, like Barthes, he seeks ‘to change the musical object itself’.Footnote 70 Cook hopes that by reformulating music as performance, as an open process rather than as an object more or less easily locatable in its notated form, the discipline of musicology might find itself newly alert to the various inscriptions of bodies, the social, and media. Cook's argument develops what is arguably a commonplace of ‘New Musicology’, building on the work of Lydia Goehr, Georgina Born, and others that problematized the work concept as a paradigm for music studies.Footnote 71 As the preceding has made clear, such a transfiguration (from work to text, from a solid entity to an open-ended process) is the project to which Charles, Stoïanova, and Miereanu committed themselves. This alignment of Cook with the subjects of this article suggests that the theorization of the open work undertaken in conversation with poststructuralist thought still has much to offer contemporary debates within and against the discipline of musicology, not least of which is an emphatically political critique of the work concept.

In the intervening decades between the mid-1970s and the present, the radical political character of the post-Cagean critique of the work – to be replaced by an atmosphere, a happening, or, perhaps, a stream – has appeared increasingly ambivalent. This politics might be articulated in terms borrowed from Louis Althusser's contemporaneous amalgamation of Marxism and Lacanian psychoanalysis: it hinges on the capacity of the interpellatory mechanisms of the hegemonic organization of musical consumption to go wrong, to be misheard (Althusser's classic scene of interpellation is an auditory one).Footnote 72 Barthes, Stoïanova, and Miereanu emphasize noisiness and mishearing: the static surfaces of American experimental music afford an encounter with the preconditions of sense and subjectivation. Paul Rekret sounds a note of caution that leans more towards Adorno than to Benjamin in discussing a form of ambience that recuperates for capital the democratizing aims of the practices of Eno and others.Footnote 73 Spotify's stated ambition to ‘soundtrack every moment of your life’ does not describe a form of semiotic democracy or dispersed musicking but the consolidation of the ‘divergent subject positions’ hailed by the various musics of a playlist into an imaginary unity governed by a dehistoricized general equivalence. Assimilated entirely to a social function in the service of capital, music, Rekret claims, appears not as a socialized, collective practice but as the ghost of such a music.Footnote 74

Through the 1970s, an attempt to articulate the Cagean open work to the latest developments in semiotics generated a rich account of musical practice that afforded a critique of existing musicological thinking. Drawing on the accounts of literary production proposed by Barthes, Kristeva, and others, Charles, Stoïanova, and Miereanu developed a theory of music as a signifying practice that continues to resonate with contemporary critiques of absolute music that emphasize the political, embodied, and social character of musical practice.

Footnotes

1 Daniel Charles, ‘La musique à Vincennes’, Musique en jeu 18 (1974); Paul Cohen, ‘La Fac Soixante-Huitarde: The Centre Universitaire Expérimental de Vincennes and the Afterlife of a Revolutionary Moment’, in Global Revolutionary Aesthetics and Politics after Paris ’68, ed. Martin Munro, William J. Cloonan, Barry J. Faulk, and Christian P. Weber (London: Lexington, 2020); John Mowitt, Text: The Genealogy of an Antidisciplinary Object (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1992), 179–82.

2 ‘Daniel Charles: biographie’, http://home.att.ne.jp/grape/charles/dc/dc-bio.html.

3 ‘Notes on Contributors’, Contemporary Music Review 8/1 (1993), 214.

4 Ana Diaconu, ‘Costin Miereanu's Contribution to Musique en jeu’, Musicology Today 12 (2021); Oana Andreica, ‘Labyrinthes d'Adrien by Costin Miereanu or the Topology of Ruptures and Junctions’, in Sounds, Societies, Significations: Numanistic Approaches to Music, ed. Rima Povilioniene (Cham: Springer, 2017), 4–5; Jim Samson, Music in the Balkans (Leiden: Brill, 2013), 461–5.

5 Quoted in Martin Iddon, ‘The Haus That Karlheinz Built: Composition, Authority, and Control at the 1968 Darmstadt Ferienkurse’, The Musical Quarterly 87/1 (2004), 108.

6 Iddon, ‘The Haus That Karlheinz Built’, 90–1.

7 Cited by Daniel Charles in ‘Dix Jeunes compositeurs’, Musique en jeu 1 (1970), 84; Costin Miereanu, Fuite et conquête du champ musical (Paris: Méridiens Klincksiek, 1995), 31.

8 Miereanu, Fuite et conquête du champ musical, 33.

9 Heinz-Klaus Metzger, ‘John Cage, or Liberated Music’ [1959], trans. Ian Pepper, October 82 (1997), 51; cf. Martin Iddon and Philip Thomas, John Cage's Concert for Piano and Orchestra (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020), 402–6.

10 The terms in which Miereanu characterized the music of the Euro-American avant-garde in the late 1960s indicate an affinity for the theoretical currents sweeping the Parisian world of letters; cf. Diaconu, ‘Costin Miereanu's Contribution to Musique en jeu’, 43.

11 Andreica, ‘Labyrinthes d'Adrien’, 6.

12 Roland Barthes, ‘From Work to Text’ [1971], in Image Music Text, ed. and trans. Stephen Heath (London: Fontana, 1977), 155.

13 François Dosse, History of Structuralism. 2: The Sign Sets, 1967–Present, trans. Deborah Glassman (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1997), 131–2.

14 Mowitt, Text, 1–47.

15 Roland Barthes, S/Z, trans. Richard Miller (Oxford: Blackwell, 1990 [1970]), 3–16.

16 Robert Piencikowski, ‘“A score neither begins nor ends; at most it pretends to”: Fragmentary Reflections on the Boulezian “non finito”’, in Pierre Boulez Studies, ed. Edward Campbell and Peter O'Hagan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016).

17 Metzger, ‘John Cage, or Liberated Music’, 61.

18 Metzger, ‘John Cage, or Liberated Music’, 59.

19 Umberto Eco, The Open Work, trans. Anna Cancogni (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1989 [1962]), 1–23.

20 Daniel Charles, ‘Entr'acte: “Formal” or “Informal” Music?’, The Musical Quarterly 51/1 (1965), 147–8; Umberto Eco, ‘L'oeuvre ouverte ou la poétique de l'indétermination’, Nouvelle revue française 91 (1960); Daniel Charles, ‘Nature et silence chez John Cage’, in Le langage: Actes du XIIe Congrès des Sociétés de philosophie de langue française (Neufchâtel: La Baconnière, 1966), 173.

21 Charles, ‘Entr'acte’, 164–5.

22 Robert Adlington, ‘Introduction: Avant-garde Music and the Sixties’, in Sound Commitments: Avant-Garde Music and the Sixties, ed. Robert Adlington (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), 5.

23 Daniel Charles, ‘L'esthétique du non finito chez John Cage’, Revue d'esthétique 21/2–4 (1968), 25.

24 Daniel Charles, ‘L'interprète et le hasard’, Musique en jeu 3 (1971), 45–6.

25 Iddon, ‘The Haus That Karlheinz Built’.

26 Charles, ‘L'esthétique du non finito chez John Cage’; Daniel Charles, ‘Ouverture et indétermination’, La Pensée 135 (1967).

27 Ivanka Stoïanova, ‘Pli selon pli: portrait de Mallarmé’, Musique en jeu 11 (1973); Daniel Charles, ‘L’écriture et le silence’, Musique en jeu 11 (1973); Daniel Charles, ‘La musique et l’écriture’, Musique en jeu 13 (1973); Miereanu, ‘“Textkomposition”: voie zéro de l’écriture musicale’, Musique en jeu 13 (1973); Ivanka Stoïanova, ‘Musique, graphie, geste’, Musique en jeu 13 (1973); Ivanka Stoïanova, ‘L’énoncé musical’, Musique en jeu 19 (1975). Both Stoïanova's various contributions and Miereanu's were excerpted from their doctoral theses, which would in turn form the bases of Stoïanova's Geste–Texte–Musique (Paris: Union général d’éditions, 1978) and Miereanu's Fuite et conquête du champ musical.

28 Charles, ‘L’écriture et le silence’, 101–3; Charles, ‘L'esthétique du non finito chez John Cage’, 25; Metzger, ‘John Cage, or Liberated Music’, 57. Charles cites Metzger's essay in ‘Ouverture et indétermination’.

29 Cf. Mowitt, Text, 180–1.

30 Charles, ‘La musique et l’écriture’, 13; Barthes, S/Z, 132.

31 Charles, ‘L’écriture et le silence’, 103.

32 Charles, ‘L’écriture et le silence’, 107–8; Barthes, ‘Le grain de la voix’, Musique en jeu 9 (1972).

33 Roland Barthes, Le degré zéro de l’écriture (Paris: Seuil, 1953); Julia Kristeva, Sèméiotikè: Recherches pour une sémanalyse (Paris: Seuil, 1969), 136.

34 Miereanu, ‘“Textkomposition”’, 54.

35 Miereanu, ‘“Textkomposition”’, 57; cf. Kristeva, Sèméiotikè, 136.

36 Stoïanova, ‘Musique, graphie, geste’, 111, 109; Miereanu, ‘“Textkomposition”’, 52–5.

37 Miereanu, ‘“Textkomposition”’, 59.

38 Stoïanova, ‘Musique, graphie, geste’, 109.

39 Stoïanova, ‘Musique, graphie, geste’, 110.

40 Cf. Mowitt, Text, 107.

41 Stoïanova, ‘Musique, graphie, geste’, 113.

42 Julia Kristeva, ‘Le sujet en procès’, in Artaud: Communications et interventions du Colloque de Cérisy, juin-juillet 1972, ed. Philippe Sollers (Paris: Union Générale d’Éditions, 1973).

43 Miereanu, ‘“Textkomposition”’, 59; Stoïanova, ‘Musique, graphie, geste’, 112–14.

44 Miereanu is probably best known today through his electronic compositions, many self-released on his Poly-art label, which sit somewhere between kosmische reveries, postminimalist stasis, and the experiments with digital synthesis of Ensemble l'Itinéraire.

45 Gianmario Borio, ‘Music as Plea for Political Action: The Presence of Musicians in Italian Protest Movements around 1968’, in Music and Protest in 1968, ed. Beate Kutschke and Barley Norton (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013), 42–3. An excerpt from a graphic score by Simonetti appeared in Cage's Notations (1969).

46 Costin Miereanu, ‘Luna cinese: un récit de science-fiction musicale’, Musique en jeu 32 (1978), 53.

47 Quoted in Yasunao Tone, ‘John Cage and Recording’, Leonardo Music Journal 13 (2003), 11.

48 Jonathan Goldman, ‘Open Works on Record: An Unsung Mediation’, in Revisiting the Historiography of Postwar Avant-Garde Music, ed. Anne-Sylvie Barthel-Calvet and Christopher Brent Murray (Abingdon: Routledge, 2023); cf. David Grubbs, Records Ruin the Landscape: John Cage, the Sixties, and Sound Recording (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2014).

49 Goldman, ‘Open Works on Record’, 162–4.

50 Theodore Strongin, ‘When the Listener Is Composer’, New York Times, 16 June 1968, Arts section, 19.

51 The subsequent record in the nova musiche series was by Martin Davorin-Jagodić, also a lecturer at Vincennes, and was similarly designated a ‘manipulable disc’.

52 Miereanu, ‘Luna cinese’, 53–4.

53 Miereanu, ‘“Textkomposition”’, 51; cf. Goldman, ‘Open Works on Record’, for a thoughtful discussion of the ontological questions thrown up by what he takes as the dialectical bind of the open work and the record form.

54 Miereanu, ‘Luna cinese’, 52.

55 Miereanu, ‘Luna cinese’, 51; Costin Miereanu, ‘Décomposons Wagner’, Musique en jeu 22 (1976).

56 Miereanu, ‘Luna cinese’, 51–2.

57 Ivanka Stoïanova, ‘Musique répétitive’, Musique en jeu 25 (1977), 71; Mowitt, Text, 185–6.

58 Stoïanova, ‘Musique répétitive’, 73; cf. Christophe Levaux, We Have Always Been Minimalist: The Construction and Triumph of a Musical Style, trans. Rose Vekony (Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2020), 139–40.

59 Mowitt, Text, 186.

60 Here Stoïanova follows Kristeva and Barthes, who at least initially appear to take their objects as specific, exceptional signifying practices: Stoïanova, Geste–Texte–Music, 9; Julia Kristeva, Revolution in Poetic Language, trans. Margaret Waller (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984 [1974]), 15; Barthes, ‘From Work to Text’.

61 Stoïanova, ‘Musique répétitive’, 70.

62 Roland Barthes, ‘Listening’ [1977], in The Responsibility of Forms: Critical Essays on Music, Art, and Representation, trans. Richard Howard (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1991), 253.

63 Barthes, ‘Listening’, 259.

64 Barthes, ‘Listening’, 255.

65 Barthes, ‘Listening’, 259.

66 Peter Szendy, Listen: A History of Our Ears, trans. Charlotte Mandell (New York: Fordham University Press, 2008), 99.

67 Szendy, Listen, 103.

68 Walter Benjamin, ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility: Second Version’, in The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility, and Other Writings on Media, ed. Michael W. Jennings, Brigid Doherty, and Thomas Y. Levin (Cambridge, MA: Belknap, 2008), 22; cf. David Goodman, ‘Distracted Listening: On Not Making Sound Choices in the 1930s’, in Sound in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, ed. David Suisman and Susan Strasser (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2010), 41–5.

69 Theodor Adorno, ‘Opera and the Long-Playing Record’ [1969], trans. Thomas Y. Levin, October 55 (1990), 64; Peter Szendy, Of Stigmatology: Punctuation as Experience, trans. Jan Plug (New York: Fordham University Press, 2018), 99–104.

70 Nicholas Cook, Beyond the Score: Music as Performance (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), 1.

71 Lydia Goehr, The Imaginary Museum of Musical Works: An Essay in the Philosophy of Music (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992); Georgina Born, ‘On Musical Mediation: Ontology, Technology and Creativity’, Twentieth-Century Music 2/1 (2005); cf. Gavin Steingo, ‘The Musical Work Reconsidered, in Hindsight’, Current Musicology 97 (2014).

72 Judith Butler notes the relation of misinterpellation to mishearing: ‘The name is called, and I am sure it is my name, but it isn't. The name is called, and I am sure it is a name being called, my name, but it is in fact someone's incomprehensible speech, or worse, it is someone coughing, or worse, a radiator which for a moment approximates a human voice’; Judith Butler, The Psychic Life of Power: Theories of Subjection (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1997), 95–6.

73 Paul Rekret, ‘“Melodies wander around as ghosts”: On Playlist as Cultural Form’, Critical Quarterly 61/2 (2019).

74 Rekret, ‘“Melodies wander around as ghosts”’, 61, 70–1; cf. Cook, Beyond the Score, 348–9.

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