You
Are There
Notes on Live Music
published in Third Degree No.4, Sydney,
1987
ON
STAGE
In
the early 60s there was a very popular and very successful
trend in sound sculpture. The means for organizing and constructing
these sculptures were fairly simple, producing spectacular
results. Ingredients : one huge stadium, X00,000 screaming
girls and four figures in identical suits. Historically
documented as originators of this trend : The Beatles. Reference
: At The Hollywood Bowl 1.
Without
wishing to attempt explanations of The Beatles as 'a modern
sociological phenomenon', these spectacles architecturally
and acoustically represented The Beatles' status as phenomenon
- exaggerating the controlled maintenance of performer/audience
bonds into their hysterical consumption of one another.
Here, the notion of 'feedback' is important, because it
was jettisoned into a new dimension - electricity - where
technical production and cultural effect energize each other
....
Consider
all the feedback loops in operation at the Hollywood Bowl
concerts : The Beatles replaying songs which in their original
form (transistor radios and portable hi-fis) sound tinny
and crackling ; their 'live' versions reproducing that same
thinness of twangy strings, hissing cymbals and raspy harmonies
; the audience replicating the transistor-texture with their
massive wall of white noise. Consider the electricity of
the event : four human dynamos whose amplification triggers
the orgiastic shrieks of their X00,000 recievers ; the electrifying
performance whose performer/audience relationship is translated
into a voltage/oscillator flow ; The Beatles and the audience
conducting each other through their point of reference and
contact - the songs.
Electrical
amplification is integral to the cultural and social growth
of Rock. It changed not only the sound of instruments but
also the scale of the live event which contained them, thereby
determining the nature of the audience experience. 'Instruments'
then can have a double meaning - musical and sociological
: capable of producing sounds in a space and effecting relationships
within that space 2.
Rock
spectacles like The Beatles' stadium concerts paved the
way for developments like the Coporate Rock of Styx and
the global tours of David Bowie. Of course not only did
the logistic presentation of Rock change, but so did its
electrified sound - typified by the wailing guitar as it
'feedbacks'. Here, guitar 'feedback' functions as a signifier
that musically and sonically recreates the communicative
processes of Rock spectacles by overloading pitch and volume
to generate a frequency that signals excess. That piercing,
screaming high-range noise speaks the voices of X00,000
screaming fans whose mass constituted the spectacle that
pushed Rock into a new phase - that of hyper-consumerism
and market-tailoring. Like a gushing mountain river (one
of the best natural white-noise experiences) the screaming
stadium concert was perceived as an energy waiting to be
tapped, harnessed and exploited. Superficially an abstract
atonal sound, the guitar 'feedback' of the latter 60s symbolizes
a distortion of audience 'feedback' pre-Beatles : both deal
with an overload in the producer/production/product chain.
While
the microphone may have amplified the words of the voice,
it was always the electric guitar that spoke loudest to
(and with more effect upon) the Rock audience. Throughout
the 60s and even into the early 70s, developments in the
electric guitar's body design and performance technique
had an uncanny way of reflecting how the live event - as
a spectacle - communicated to its audience : from McCartney's
violin-like bass guitar (ensuring no bottom-end would interfere
with their 'high-frequency' relation to their audience)
to The Ventures' Mosrite guitars (you too can sound like
a packaged group with a Mosrite guitar ; you can become
The Ventures) to Jimi Hendrix's baroque distortion of electrical
tones (for a self-distorting tripped-out subculture who
tickled themselves with the alteration of their perception)
to Steve Howe's double-necked guitar (elevating 'performance'
into an awe-inspiring display of technical mastery, Yes
could have just as successfully done their gigs in museums)
3.
And
while The Beatles were able to erupt in the excessive noise
of the stadium by using simple electric guitars played with
a heavy R'n'B twang (amplified by Vox stage equipment),
the consequent merger of rock subcultures with mass-marketing
spawned the invention of guitar effects that could symbolically
build upon the phenomenological status of The Beatles' spectacles
: from fuzz (instant overload, instant point of hysterical
feedback) to echo (instant repeatability, instant multiplication
of gesture) to phase (instant 'soaring and gliding' effect,
instant feel of transcendence and ethereality) 4.
The mass production of these 'effect boxes' in a way ensured
the mass production of sounds that symbolically referred
to the nature of their consumption, because the 'effect
box' tells the guitarist : you too can make those sounds
; you can become those sounds.
If
noise is essentially an overload of sounds, then Rock truly
is noisy. In effect, the sound of its live concert - produced
by audience-performer feedback and amplified electric instruments
- is the noise of spectacle ; the noise of communicated
signals and audible responses.
ON
RECORD
One
of the most fascinating phrases in the language of Rock
and Pop has to be "recorded live". Those two words emblazened
on the cover design always seem to declare something about
recording and performing ; often something desperate. What
exactly do those two words mean? A lot.
Prior
to multi-tracking studio work music was recorded 'live'
in the studio. Of course this doesn't mean that reality
was automatically encoded as realism in the recording process,
but that the performers would generate a spatial-temporal
event that was recorded as a fusion of sounds in real-time.
Multiple miking may have fractured the space into a complex
of listening focal points, but their recorded signals would
be mixed together into a composite documentation that effected
the original spatial-temporal occurrence as a singular event.
However, the first twenty-odd years of studio recording
were not regarded as 'live'.
"Recorded
live" more directly refers to the audience that is being
encoded and recorded as part of the fusion of sounds in
the one place in real time. The spectacle is thus translated
in the recording process, in that "recorded live" ultimately
means that the spectacle as a whole - as hysterical consumption
energized by feedback in this electric dimension - is "recorded
live". Just as the guitarist can musically recreate the
mode of this kind of spectacle with his effect boxes by
becoming those sounds, so too does the audience become the
spectacle by virtue of their being encoded in the live recording.
'Live' records then afford the listener a behavioural thrill
of hearing 'themselves' (ie. non-performers) on the record,
documented as contributing to the energy of the spectacle.
This
behavioural aspect of the listening mode was an important
part of record marketing around the first British Invasion
from 1964 to 1966. The fuel for the Invasion was "live recordings"
in one form or another 5. The United States -
in a constant state of economic paranoia - found that one
way to compete with The Beatles phenomenon was to replicate
the status of their spectacle by making their artists record
'live' records, in an attempt to demonstrate that The Beatles
weren't the only ones capable of generating hysteria 6.
More importantly, the international proliferation of 'live'
recordings between 1964 and 1967 trained consumers in how
to behave as well as how to listen. In short, they were
trained how to become listeners and how to recognize themselves
in the recordings.
And
here we return to the original notion of sound sculpture
and its primary ingredients. Many of these so-called "recorded
live" records were in fact reconstructions of the actual
events in terms of sound sculpture. That is, they were recorded
on stage or in the studio 'live' but then mixed with recordings
of screaming fans. The final mix would push the volume levels
of the audience noise at the appropriate points of response,
so that - in the recording process - the hysteria was controlled
and put to the service of stating the spectacle. The energy
of the audience - that massive sheet of white noise blanketing
the stage - was tapped ; the 'live' record was a demonstration
of its containment ; the mix of audience noise a score for
'listener participation'. Television sitcoms had canned
laughter - Rock & Pop had live recordings.
IN
CONCERT
As
in the trajectory of many spectacles, the live event as
a source of energy was soon drained once it had been recognized
and identified as such - the result of it inflating itself
beyond a degree of effectiveness in order to meet the demands
placed upon its performance. Rock Festivals and the like
from 1967 through to c. 1972 are important here 7,
because of how they temporarily suggested a potential rechannelling
of the spectacle's energy, even if only to marginally extend
it's trajectory. Whereas the Beatles-type phenomenon of
hysteria was ultimately a spectacle of consumption, Rock
Festivals generated a different feedback principle - one
of exchange. Their energy was that of a subculture coming
into contact with itself, of discovering and realizing a
potential for more exchanges which consequently typified
the Rock Festival as utopian : a recluse, an alternative,
an idyllic break from 'society'.
Interestingly
enough, the end of those utopian ideals ("Music, Love &
Flowers") came from the audience's realization that festival
promoters interpreted the massive crowds not as the power
of unity, but yet again as a gushing white river of high
returns. Perhaps that is where the greatest delusion laid,
for what seems to mark the Festival spectacle different
from the Beatles spectacle is that the masses of Monterey
and Woodstock felt that they were the spectacle, that their
coming together and coming into contact with one another
energized the spectacle, that their spectacle was fuelled
by 'people power'. The irony is that it was precisely the
same power that fuelled the hyper-consumptive Beatles spectacle.
No wonder their loss felt greater than the hysterical fan
who - plugged into the eternal flow of music-trend production
- could switch allegiances, lifestyles, obsessions and tastes
with schizoid ease. The Festival audience may have gatecrashed
the events, but they ended up paying the price for investing
too much of themselves into the spectacle.
By
the end of the 60s, the beast of Rock Journalism had formed
very strong notions of what Rock was all about and what
it should be for the sake of its future. The notion of being
'live', of maintaining such a state of existence and mode
of production, was regarded primal. (In many respects that
belief exists today.) Rock Journalism was (and still is
in cycles 8) caught up in a confounded nostalgia
or desire for those quick flashes, those shooting stars
where a performer was at an energy peak in an environment
which had yet to drain him or her of their energy through
inflating their performance into spectacle. In other words
: The Beatles at The Cavern ; James Brown at The Apollo
; The Ramones at C.B.G.B.s ; etc. Virtually every performer
from every music style has their own mythical grotto, their
shrine of inception, of the loss of their virginity. These
environments and spaces are revered as locations of raw
energy, of an untamed white noise which supposedly allowed
the music to speak directly with its audience.
The
oft neglected point - and it's a doozy of a paradox - is
that 'live' works well in theory, but not so well in practice.
What do we do with those reports of early gigs by Beatles,
Brown and Ramones as being sloppy, tedious or uninspired?
What about the no-hoper bands we see who two years later
attain incredible popularity? Live events might determine
the development of a performer, but it is the records that
document those stages, capturing them for presentation and
preparing them for repeatability. The record is more often
seen as an ideal form or definitive state to depict that
stage of the performer and the performance (even though
most bands neurotically disclaim their last record when
the new one is about to be released) 9.
This
is where the "live recording" is so important (for the promotion
and maintenance of these myths). They document not only
an idealized stage of musical development, but also an ideal
staging for the audience - a fusion of the best performance
with the best response. In the sense that musique concrete
fostered the notion that magnetic tape compositions were
neither an interpretation nor a performance but a realization
of the two, live recordings could be said to be neither
a performance nor its reaction but an idealization of the
two. The "live recording" thus materially executes the predominant
desire of a live performance : that the music, performer
and audience become one.
All
this, of course, is historically coded as a flow of fixtures,
where the notion of and desire for 'live-ness' is continually
changing and developing as a chain reaction to itself. From
the brittle artiface of the British Invasion-era live recordings
to the double and triple album opera of the mega-concert
Festivals, the form of the live recording states a historical
phase of the 'live' concept. The early 70s was caught up
in a post-Festival problematic. The Festival - particularily
with the horror of the Stones' Altamont concert of 1969
- was often an awkward and ugly reminder that 'live' did
only work in theory, at least when it attempted to become
a spectacle of universality, to show the world how 'together'
the subcultures/countercultures were.
Consequently,
1970 stands as a compromise year where major artists released
live albums : The Who's Live At Leeds, The Doors' Absolutely
Live and The Rolling Stones' "Get Yer Ya-Yas Out!". The
compromise was not an artistic one , but one of toning down
the universal aspect of the Festival (bringing you every
act you would want to hear) into a solo presentation, which
of course brings the concert back to the idolatory type
of spectacle that so intensely hyped up the Beatles' audiences.
In a way, live energy was being sited in different locations
: with the Beatles stadium concerts it was in the fusion
of audience and performer ; with Monterey and Woodstock
it was in the audience ; and with the live albums of the
early 70s it was in the performer. Those latter live albums
relocated live energy into the identity of the performer.
(This 'relocation' on the part of the artist no doubt partially
contributes to Rock's dogma of priviledging the live performance
as the life-blood of the music.)
Most
interestingly, the solo-artist 'live' double-album is a
perverse sign of co-option that guided Rock through the
70s in such a way that Disco stands as one of that decade's
most energized and energizing musical styles. How is this
so? Because the monster that the Festival created - the
audience - was tamed by its masters and creators - the performers.
The more Morrison howled, the more Daltery screeched, the
more Jagger whooped, the more suspect the whole thing seemed
(and stills seems). All that noise of performing, of energizing,
of 'going over the top' worked to distract the listener
(trapped in the grooves of the disc) from this co-option
and focus him or her on the ecstacy of the performance -
or more correctly, the state of ecstacy in which the artist
performed. (Note also that this is the era of "Supergroups"
and "Guitar Heroes" and the like : figures who were not
to be hysterically consumed, but hysterically worshipped.)
Enter
Iggy Pop, performance artist of the noise of Rock. Iggy
Pop performed with his body and treated his audience as
a body, dealing with energy in physical terms (in the literal
sense) 10. Audience contact? There he goes diving
into the audience (his violent immersion) ; there he is
falling backwards onto them (his exhausted salvation) ;
there he is walking on their hands (his fake miracle). Audience
feedback? There he goes rolling in the broken glass they
threw at him (their kudos) ; there he goes hiting himself
with the microphone (their transmitter). Iggy Pop desperately
wanted to reclaim the audience energy lost to the 70s heroes,
to relocate that energy in the audience 11..
Ultimately, he wanted to recreate that monster from the
60s. (The monster was fully developed by the emergence of
Punk.)
Between
Iggy Pop and Power Pop, the presence of the audience continued
a phantom existence. Live albums (still mostly as doubles
- in order to fully capture the total experience, you understand)
became recognized symbols of what you had to do after making
too many studio albums (3 to 4). Such live albums were mostly
delivered as proof that the artist in question could perform.
This level of desperation correlates the amount of work
in technically capturing the sound of the audience and the
spatial environment as well as the sound of the music. Listeners
did not need to be demonstrated new ways to behave, but
they did require new ways to listen to themselves, ways
which would more realistically simulate their presence in
the live environment. Note that 'environment' is then a
more apt word than 'spectacle' due to the decidely lower
appeal that mega-concerts held for the consumer, who (when
there at the mega-concerts) could not even consume the energy
of his fellow audience-members, let alone that of the performers
on stage.
'Environment'
is what Lou Reed's Take No Prisoners double-live album from
1978 is all about. Touted as the first binaural recording
(a process 12 that appealed to Reed's little-publicised
fascination with technical crafting) this album is a perverse
demonstration of a perverse performer in a perverse enviroment
13. In other words, it is a hyper realistic documentation
of Reed doing a tribute to Lenny Bruce et al in a small
club - a space that at the time was conservatively viewed
as not the place to 'record live' because it didn't lend
itself well to conveying the bloated spectacle which record
companies believed a live recording should live up to. Reed
realized that the hyper realsim afforded by the binaural
process could convey the energy of a small environment better
than a sub-standard recording of a packed stadium yelling
back "YEAH!" everytime Peter Frampton dribbled "Do you feel
like I do?" into his guitar vocoder on Frampton Comes Alive
14.
IN
STUDIO
By
the start of the 80s, spaces and environments were key elements
of interest in all modes of recording. While binaural recoding
didn't revolutionize studio technique (even though it affords
interesting experimental effects on Reed's Street Hassle,
1978) the introduction of digital effects did. Today, record
production still speaks the essential technical dialect
of digital delay and digital reverb : the two seminal components
in creating space, location, perspective and dimension in
sound in post-production. In effect, this is like a Frankenstein
experiment in reviving the dead (with - suprise - electricity)
in that source sounds can be recorded in mono, and then
- through the digital simulation of echo version and spatial
reverberation - be 'revived' and relocated in stereo in
the post-mortem. The void space of the studio is thus reconstructed
through the effecting of the sounds, making themm occur
in phantom spaces which do not exist within the physical
confines of the actual studio. Perhaps that's why the binaural
process faded away - Take No Prisoners could be much more
easily constructed in the studio with digital technology
(and if you don't believe me, listen to Madonna's 12" remix
of Angel of 1984 : the most wonderfully fake-live record
to date) 15.
Here
we should remember (mourn?) Quadrophonic recordings. They
demonstrated the dumbest understanding of the nature of
representation, by trying to encode representations into
a real, architecturally delineated, spatial environment.
File with 3-D and Sensurround. The intake of representations
often has little to do with a precise equilibrium between
the form of the image's depiction and the form of what the
image is depicting. Quadrophonic was banal and domestic
at its best, attempting to transform "your loungeroom" into
the real space of the performance and its recording. You
are there? Not really - just in another possible spatial
configuration, encoded as a listener into a spatial effect
and not a 'reality' of the credible/believable sort (though
possibly a 'reality' of the delluded sort). Binaural recording
benefited from a more sophisticated technical means of simulation,
though even that did not insure its development, because
it ended up that the sound of a space was more desirable
and more effective than an actual space (be it in headphones
or loungerooms). Digital effects are perfect instruments
for generating the sound of sounds.
I
end these notes with two examples of manipulating the sound
of the audience. They both demonstrate the high 'image'
content that such a sound has carried throughout the 80s,
where the audience - as a socialized mass that can physically
be experienced - is treated (by producer and listener) as
an image, an effect, a gesture ; for the time being drained
of its 'noise' and exhausted by its 'live' recordings.
Anthony
Moore's Lucia (the 7" version not on his Flying Doesn't
Help album of 1979) sounds like a credible live recording.
The song starts up with a pounding drum intro that 'sounds
live'. One can also hear crowd noise and ambience complete
with someone whistling. After a few plays you realize how
strange the drum phrasing is with its fill/breaks which
only occasionally coincide with the start of a next verse
or a change into the chorus : mostly the drum break bursts
out right in the middle of a lyric line. Then after a few
more listens, a strange high pitched squeal stands out :
someone whistling in the audience. Closer attention reveals
that the whistle in fact goes throughout the whole song.
A few more listens and you realize that the whistle occurs
in a regular pattern. One more listen and you've got it
: the audience whistle is phrased exactly with the drum
break.
Did
you pick it up? Moore has recorded the drum intro from someone
else's 'live' record (presumably) and made the short drum
intro to a song into a tape loop, which then functions as
the backing track for Moore to overlay and construct his
own song Lucia. This isn't Beaudrillard simulation - it's
a Duchamp pun, firmly embedded in its material textuality.
'Simulation'
also doesn't properly describe this next example : Chaka
Khan's 12" I Feel For You from 1984. It works best on the
radio. You're moving along with the drive of the song, identifying
its surges and pulsations produced by a fractured combination
of sharp kick drum, 'boxed' snare, crystalline keyboards,
sadistic slap-bass, etc. The strange cymbal crashes don't
particularly sound out of place amidst the violent production
and its distortion of sounds. During one listening, though,
you think you hear an audience cheer. On the record? You
focus your listening - no, there certainly isn't any 'crowd
sound' in this hyper-production. Then it happens again,
but this time you catch it.
POW!
Instead of using the sound of a cymbal, this record uses
the sound of audience applause to replace the sound of a
cymbal. The drive of I Feel For You is based on dynamics
- specifically, on the construction of dynamics through
simulations, recreations and distortions of sound surfaces
and textures, so that the arrangement of the sounds (not
the 'musical arrangement') effects realistic dynamics :
the punch of the snare, the thump of the bass, the crash
of the cymbals. And just consider the wonderful semiotic
effect of that 'audience crash' : the record controlling
audience dynamics, cueing their response, and rhythmically
locating the listener location within both the sound and
the music text.
In
1964, it took a modern sociological phenomenon like The
Beatle's to trigger a burst of audience noise. In 1984 it
takes the gating of a snare to trigger a sampling of an
audience sound effect. And for all we know, that sound effect
could just as well have been taken from ..... At The Hollywood
Bowl. You are there.
NOTES
1
Two Beatles' albums released in 1977 were At The Hollywood
Bowl and Live At The Star Club, Hamburg. The reasons for
their release at such a time is twofold - firstly, for nostalgia
; secondly, to counteract the incredible bootleg industry
that specialized in early Beatles' live recordings. It is
interesting to compare both these records in terms of their
density of crowd sound. It's also worth hearing some of
those early bootlegs, whose noise level puts any Industrial
exponents to shame.
2
Consider the difference in spatial, economic, acoustic and
even semantic effects from The Cavern to The Hollywood Bowl.
3
Other records that deserve a quick note in passing : Lou
Reed's Metal Machine Music 1975 (every 'feedbacking' electric
guitar in the whole world mixed together to produce the
ultimate wall of noise as a spectacle of the sound of Rock)
and The Cramps' Human Fly 1978 (whose fuzz guitar is so
fuzzed it makes the hissing cymbal sound more tonal and
pitch-oriented than the fuzz guitar). The semiotics of the
guitar would be better serviced by a separate article.
4
I don't mention reverberation as an effect here because
its semiological effect is more to do with solitude, emptiness
and loneliness as connotated by the absence of the direct
sound, which is represented by its reverb, its 'aural shadow'.
5
Dicey area, here - one that no doubt needs further research.
These "live recordings" were either actually recorded from
a live concert, constructed in a studio, or simply marketed
in conjunction with a concurrent live tour of the States.
Some examples whose titles at least demonstrate a leaning
towards 'live' : The Dave Clark 5 American Tour, Five Live
Yardbirds, The Animals on Tour, Herman's Hermits On Tour,
Got Live If You Want It (Rolling Stones) and The Live Kinks
(all between 1965 and 1966).
6
This, however, does not appear to have been a major option
as only two 'name' releases from this period stand out :
The Beach Boys Live In London and The Ventures On Stage.
Rock histories generally explain the British Invasion in
terms of timing, in that there was very little 'raw live
energy' happening in Rock stateside, considering that the
U.S. competition comprised Phil Spector and Motown - two
trends which relied heavily on record production. (The States
was perhaps also gearing up for a hyper-intensive consumer
attack with The Monkees, The Archies and the Bubblegum explosion.)
7
From 1967 into the early 70s : Monterey, Woodstock, Palm
Springs, Newport, Denver, Atlanta, Toronto, Isle Of White,
etc.
8
This is a fake footnote. If you need empirical data to qualify
these views on Rock Journalism then you probably aren't
suss to the culture flow of Rock. Suggested reading : some
Rock mags.
9
It should be pointed out that the integral energy of a live
performance is its vunerability, its fraility, and its state
of rawness. Rock journalism, though, transforms this almost
'tactile' sensation (of 'feeling' the roughness) into an
ideological truism upon which the survival of Rock is based.
If anything, the live gig is an erotic thrill of experiencing
things that might go wrong, astray, over-the-top. Perhaps
the audience then 'wanks' as much as the performers?
10
I'm particularly referring to Iggy's performances with The
Stooges circa 1972-1973.
11
Audiences themselves were also in awe of their own monstrous
energy - from the Mod who, like an electrified Narcissuss,
stared down from the balcony into a mass of himself and
dove into it, to become himself ; to the Thrash punk who,
like an 'orgasm addict' repeatedly climbs onto the stage
not to contact the performer, but to dive back off into
the audience, into himself.
12
The binaural process was devised in a headset-microphone
whose stereo mikes were architecturally designed to replicate
the shape and form of the human ear in dimensional terms.
The simulated effect is of a 180 hemisphere in playback,
as opposed to the half-circle plane articulated in conventional
stereo placement.
13
'Perverse' also refers to Reed's return to the live recording.
Following the sucess of Transformer in 1973 with his glam
connection via Bowie, Mainman & RCA, The Velvet Underground
was discovered by a whole new generation. Ever the cynic
(it seemed) Reed punched out two live albums - Rock'N'Roll
Animal in 1974 and Lou Reed Live in 1975 - which transformed
the Velvet Underground classics into modernized hard rockers
courtesy of Bob Ezrin session guitar heroes Steve Hunter
and Dick Wagner. (Ezrin produced Berlin and Sally Can't
Dance). Apparently Reed thought audiences would click to
the Velvet's material in essence, but they were more excited
by Reed's controversial image and status. This only served
to piss Reed off, which - combined with his neo-suicidal
tendancies and a souring relationship with RCA - spawned
the cathartic release of Metal Machine Music in 1975. Reed's
concerts from 1973 to 1976 (and, let's face it, till the
present day) were always typified by a venomous disdain
toward the audience - which they loved and which probably
only pissed him off more. Taking all this into account,
the humour in the small club recording of Take No Prisoners
is definitely perverse!
14
Released in 1976, this is often cited as the highest selling
live album of all time.
15
I am here only touching on a huge area, one that has been
the major feature of music over the past 20 years at least,
but of which little has been written : record production.
This article only deals with record production in relation
to the construction of the listener as a 'live' component
in the presentation of the music. Record production is a
much, much larger area than that.