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Hauntology (music)

Hauntology is a music genre[1][2] or a loosely defined stylistic feature[3] that evokes cultural memory and aesthetics of the past.[4] It developed in the 2000s primarily among British electronic musicians,[5][6] and typically draws on British cultural sources from the 1940s to the 1970s, including library music, film and TV soundtracks, psychedelia, and public information films, often through the use of sampling.[1]

Equipment used by the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, a common influence on hauntology artists.[1]

The term was derived from philosopher Jacques Derrida's concept of the same name. In the mid-2000s, it was adapted by theorists Simon Reynolds and Mark Fisher.[1] Hauntology is associated with the UK record label Ghost Box, in addition to artists such as the Caretaker, Burial, and Philip Jeck.[1] Music genres hypnagogic pop and chillwave descended from hauntology.

Characteristics

In music, hauntology is predominantly associated with a British electronic music trend but it can apply to any art concerned with the aesthetics of the past.[4] The trend is often tied to notions of retrofuturism, whereby artists evoke the past by utilising the "spectral sounds of old music technology".[7] The trend involves the sampling of older sound sources to evoke deep cultural memory.[8] Critic Simon Reynolds stated in a 2006 article that "this strand of 'ghostified' music doesn’t quite constitute a genre, a scene, or even a network. [...] more of a flavour or atmosphere than a style with boundaries",[3] although in a 2017 article he summarized it as a "largely British genre of eerie electronics fixated on ideas of decaying memory and lost futures".[9] A 2009 blog post by academic Adam Harper stated that "[h]auntology is not a genre of art or music, but an aesthetic effect, a way of reading and appreciating art".[10]

Hauntological music draws on varied postwar cultural sources[5] from the 1940s through the 1970s which lie outside the usual canon of popular music, including library music, film and television soundtracks, educational music, and the sonic experimentation of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, as well as electronic and folk music sources.[1] Other British influences include obscure musique concrète composers and Joe Meek's album I Hear a New World,[3] as well as psychedelia and public information films.[4] Also important is the appropriation of visual iconography from this earlier period, including graphic design elements of school textbooks, public information posters, and television idents.[1]

Artists typically use vintage recording devices such as cassettes and synthesisers from the 1960s and 1970s.[4] Production often foregrounds the grain of the recording, including vinyl noise and tape hiss derived from the degraded musical or spoken word samples commonly used.[11] Sampling is used to "evoke 'dead presences'" which are transformed into "eerie sonic markers".[11] Artists often mix antique synthesiser tones, acoustic instruments, and digital techniques, as well as found sounds, abstract noise, and industrial drones.[3]


Etymology

The term hauntology was introduced by French philosopher Jacques Derrida in his 1993 book Specters of Marx as a term for the post-Marxist understanding of what is perceived as the tendency of Karl Marx's ideas to "haunt Western society from beyond the grave".[1]

1900s and 2000s

In music journalism, Derrida's ideas were invoked by critic Ian Penman for his 1995 essay on the production style of Tricky's album Maxinquaye, though Penman did not use the phrase "hauntology."[12] In the mid-2000s, the word began to be more widely appropriated by writers and theorists such as Simon Reynolds and Mark Fisher, who referred to the work of Philip Jeck, William Basinski, Burial, The Caretaker, and artists associated with the UK label Ghost Box as hauntology.[1] Fisher attributed this renewed discussion of hauntology to the emergence of lo-fi musician Ariel Pink in the mid-2000s.[13] In an 2006 article for The Wire, Reynolds identified Ghost Box's the Focus Group, Belbury Poly, the Advisory Circle as prominent in the trend, along with Broadcast, the Caretaker, and Mordant Music.[3]

Several elements of hauntology as a musical style were presaged by Scottish electronic duo Boards of Canada.[14] Other progenitors include Portishead[8] and I Monster.[15] Reynolds also invoked sample-based group Position Normal as presaging the genre.[16]

Music genres hypnagogic pop and chillwave – sometimes deployed interchangeably with each other[17] – descended from hauntology.[18] The former is described as an "American cousin" to hauntology.[19]

Critical analysis

Hauntological music is identified with British culture,[19] and was described as an attempt to evoke "a nostalgia for a future that never came to pass, with a vision of a strange, alternate Britain, constituted from the reordered refuse of the postwar period" by The Oxford Handbook of Music and Virtuality.[5] Simon Reynolds described it as an attempt to construct a "lost utopianism" rooted in visions of a benevolent post-welfare state.[3] A sense of loss and bereavement is central to the phenomenon, according to theologian Johan Eddebo.[20]


Simon Reynolds in 2011 remarked,

There are those who say that hauntology’s moment has passed... that a good five or six years after the genre-not-genre coalesced, its set of reference points and sonic tropes has been worn threadbare. [...] how can you call time on a genre so self-consciously untimely? “Consensus to Delete” a/k/a the debate at Wikipedia about whether or not to erase the entry on ‘Hauntology (musical genre)’. In the end the shadowy cabal... decreed that Hauntology was too ontologically tenuous an entity to qualify for status as proper knowledge. It’s the kind of Moebius pretzel of preposterous-yet-faintly-sinister discourse that could have inspired an entire monograph by Michel “Power/KnowledgeFoucault or Jacques “Archive Fever” Derrida. But look, look, how carefully and scrupulously they preserve (“do not modify”) the record of their own deliberations.[21]

Liam Sprod of 3:AM Magazine stated that "[h]auntology as aesthetics is firmly rooted in the idea of nostalgia as a disruption of time," adding that "[i]nstead of mere repetition, this distance provides a sense of loss and mourning, [...] and revitalizes the potential for a utopianism for the present age".[22] Mark Fisher characterised the hauntology movement as "a sign that 'white' culture can no longer escape the temporal disjunctions that have been constitutive of the Afrodiasporic experience", calling it contemporary electronic music's "confrontation with a cultural impasse: the failure of the future".[23] Fisher stated that

[W]hen cultural innovation has stalled and even gone backwards, [...] one function of hauntology is to keep insisting that there are futures beyond postmodernity’s terminal time. When the present has given up on the future, we must listen for the relics of the future in the unactivated potentials of the past.[24]

Hauntological music is stated by academic Sean Albeiz to suggest "an uncanny mixture of shared but faded cultural memories with sinister undercurrents".[1] Hauntology (along with the hypnagogic movement) was likened to "sonic fictions or intentional forgeries, creating half-baked memories of things that never were—approximating the imprecise nature of memory itself".[25]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Albiez, Sean (2017). Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World, Volume 11. Bloomsbury. pp. 347–349. ISBN 9781501326103. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  2. ^ Reynolds, Simon. "Why Burial's Untrue Is the Most Important Electronic Album of the Century So Far". Pitchfork. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Reynolds, Simon. "HAUNTED AUDIO, a/k/a SOCIETY OF THE SPECTRAL: Ghost Box, Mordant Music and Hauntology". The Wire. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d Daniels, Alexandria. "A Study of Hauntology in Berbarian Sound Studio". Talk Film Society. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  5. ^ a b c Whiteley, Sheila; Rambarran, Shara (22 January 2016). The Oxford Handbook of Music and Virtuality. Oxford University Press. p. 412.
  6. ^ Fisher, Mark. "The Metaphysics of Crackle: Afrofuturism and Hauntology". Dance Cult.
  7. ^ McLeod, Ken (2015). "Hip Hop Holograms". Afrofuturism 2.0: The Rise of Astro-Blackness. Lexington. ISBN 9781498510516. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  8. ^ a b Rodgers, Jude (24 August 2019). "Dummy wasn't a chillout album. Portishead had more in common with Nirvana'". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  9. ^ Reynolds, Simon. "Why Burial's Untrue Is the Most Important Electronic Album of the Century So Far". Pitchfork. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  10. ^ Harper, Adam (27 October 2009). "Hauntology: The Past Inside The Present". Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  11. ^ a b Sexton, Jamie (2012). "Weird Britain in Exile: Ghost Box, Hauntology, and Alternative Heritage". Popular Music and Society. 35 (4): 561–584. doi:10.1080/03007766.2011.608905. S2CID 191619593. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  12. ^ Fisher, Mark. "The Metaphysics of Crackle: Afrofuturism and Hauntology". Dance Cult. Without using either term, Penman’s 1995 essay showed that Afrofuturism and hauntology are two sides of the same double-faced phenomenon.
  13. ^ Fisher, Mark (26 April 2010). "Ariel Pink: Russian roulette". Fact.
  14. ^ Reynolds, Simon. "Why Boards of Canada's Music Has the Right to Children Is the Greatest Psychedelic Album of the '90s". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  15. ^ "Little Britain actor Paul Putner lets us leaf through his record collection". 8 February 2017.
  16. ^ Reynolds, Simon (2012). Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction to its Own Past. London: Faber & Faber. pp. 333–335. ISBN 978-0571232093. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  17. ^ Weiss, Dan (6 July 2012). "Slutwave, Tumblr Rap, Rape Gaze: Obscure Musical Genres Explained". LA Weekly.
  18. ^ Gabrielle, Timothy (22 August 2010). "Chilled to Spill: How The Oil Spill Ruined Chillwave's Summer Vacation". PopMatters. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  19. ^ a b Bell, David. "Deserter's Songs – Looking Backwards: In Defence of Nostalgia". Ceasefire Mag. Retrieved 17 August 2016.
  20. ^ Eddebo, Johan (24 June 2017). "In search of lost time". Catholic Insight.
  21. ^
  22. ^ Sprod, Liam (11 May 2012). "Against All Ends: Hauntology, Aesthetics, Ontology". 3:AM Magazine. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  23. ^ Evans, Polly (3 February 2017). "Is electronic music a threat to culture?". Varsity.
  24. ^ Fisher, Mark (2013). "The Metaphysics of Crackle: Afrofuturism and Hauntology". Dancecult: Journal of Electronic Dance Music Culture. 5 (2): 42. Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  25. ^ Simpson, J. (2015). "Chapter Three - The Disintegration Loops, Hauntology, & Hypnagogic Pop". William Basinski: Musician Snapshots. The Music You Should Hear Series. SBE Media (Stone Blue Editors). Retrieved 14 January 2020.

Further reading

  • Reynolds, Simon (15 October 2017). "HAUNTOLOGY: the GHOST BOX label (Frieze, 2005)".
  • Fisher, Mark (17 January 2006). "Hauntology Now". k-punk.abstractdynamics.org.

hauntology, music, original, philosophical, concept, hauntology, been, suggested, that, this, article, merged, into, hauntology, discuss, proposed, since, april, 2022, hauntology, music, genre, loosely, defined, stylistic, feature, that, evokes, cultural, memo. For the original philosophical concept see Hauntology It has been suggested that this article be merged into Hauntology Discuss Proposed since April 2022 Hauntology is a music genre 1 2 or a loosely defined stylistic feature 3 that evokes cultural memory and aesthetics of the past 4 It developed in the 2000s primarily among British electronic musicians 5 6 and typically draws on British cultural sources from the 1940s to the 1970s including library music film and TV soundtracks psychedelia and public information films often through the use of sampling 1 Equipment used by the BBC Radiophonic Workshop a common influence on hauntology artists 1 The term was derived from philosopher Jacques Derrida s concept of the same name In the mid 2000s it was adapted by theorists Simon Reynolds and Mark Fisher 1 Hauntology is associated with the UK record label Ghost Box in addition to artists such as the Caretaker Burial and Philip Jeck 1 Music genres hypnagogic pop and chillwave descended from hauntology Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Etymology 3 1900s and 2000s 4 Critical analysis 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingCharacteristics EditIn music hauntology is predominantly associated with a British electronic music trend but it can apply to any art concerned with the aesthetics of the past 4 The trend is often tied to notions of retrofuturism whereby artists evoke the past by utilising the spectral sounds of old music technology 7 The trend involves the sampling of older sound sources to evoke deep cultural memory 8 Critic Simon Reynolds stated in a 2006 article that this strand of ghostified music doesn t quite constitute a genre a scene or even a network more of a flavour or atmosphere than a style with boundaries 3 although in a 2017 article he summarized it as a largely British genre of eerie electronics fixated on ideas of decaying memory and lost futures 9 A 2009 blog post by academic Adam Harper stated that h auntology is not a genre of art or music but an aesthetic effect a way of reading and appreciating art 10 Hauntological music draws on varied postwar cultural sources 5 from the 1940s through the 1970s which lie outside the usual canon of popular music including library music film and television soundtracks educational music and the sonic experimentation of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop as well as electronic and folk music sources 1 Other British influences include obscure musique concrete composers and Joe Meek s album I Hear a New World 3 as well as psychedelia and public information films 4 Also important is the appropriation of visual iconography from this earlier period including graphic design elements of school textbooks public information posters and television idents 1 Artists typically use vintage recording devices such as cassettes and synthesisers from the 1960s and 1970s 4 Production often foregrounds the grain of the recording including vinyl noise and tape hiss derived from the degraded musical or spoken word samples commonly used 11 Sampling is used to evoke dead presences which are transformed into eerie sonic markers 11 Artists often mix antique synthesiser tones acoustic instruments and digital techniques as well as found sounds abstract noise and industrial drones 3 Etymology EditThe term hauntology was introduced by French philosopher Jacques Derrida in his 1993 book Specters of Marx as a term for the post Marxist understanding of what is perceived as the tendency of Karl Marx s ideas to haunt Western society from beyond the grave 1 1900s and 2000s EditIn music journalism Derrida s ideas were invoked by critic Ian Penman for his 1995 essay on the production style of Tricky s album Maxinquaye though Penman did not use the phrase hauntology 12 In the mid 2000s the word began to be more widely appropriated by writers and theorists such as Simon Reynolds and Mark Fisher who referred to the work of Philip Jeck William Basinski Burial The Caretaker and artists associated with the UK label Ghost Box as hauntology 1 Fisher attributed this renewed discussion of hauntology to the emergence of lo fi musician Ariel Pink in the mid 2000s 13 In an 2006 article for The Wire Reynolds identified Ghost Box s the Focus Group Belbury Poly the Advisory Circle as prominent in the trend along with Broadcast the Caretaker and Mordant Music 3 Several elements of hauntology as a musical style were presaged by Scottish electronic duo Boards of Canada 14 Other progenitors include Portishead 8 and I Monster 15 Reynolds also invoked sample based group Position Normal as presaging the genre 16 Music genres hypnagogic pop and chillwave sometimes deployed interchangeably with each other 17 descended from hauntology 18 The former is described as an American cousin to hauntology 19 Critical analysis EditHauntological music is identified with British culture 19 and was described as an attempt to evoke a nostalgia for a future that never came to pass with a vision of a strange alternate Britain constituted from the reordered refuse of the postwar period by The Oxford Handbook of Music and Virtuality 5 Simon Reynolds described it as an attempt to construct a lost utopianism rooted in visions of a benevolent post welfare state 3 A sense of loss and bereavement is central to the phenomenon according to theologian Johan Eddebo 20 Simon Reynolds in 2011 remarked There are those who say that hauntology s moment has passed that a good five or six years after the genre not genre coalesced its set of reference points and sonic tropes has been worn threadbare how can you call time on a genre so self consciously untimely Consensus to Delete a k a the debate at Wikipedia about whether or not to erase the entry on Hauntology musical genre In the end the shadowy cabal decreed that Hauntology was too ontologically tenuous an entity to qualify for status as proper knowledge It s the kind of Moebius pretzel of preposterous yet faintly sinister discourse that could have inspired an entire monograph by Michel Power Knowledge Foucault or Jacques Archive Fever Derrida But look look how carefully and scrupulously they preserve do not modify the record of their own deliberations 21 Liam Sprod of 3 AM Magazine stated that h auntology as aesthetics is firmly rooted in the idea of nostalgia as a disruption of time adding that i nstead of mere repetition this distance provides a sense of loss and mourning and revitalizes the potential for a utopianism for the present age 22 Mark Fisher characterised the hauntology movement as a sign that white culture can no longer escape the temporal disjunctions that have been constitutive of the Afrodiasporic experience calling it contemporary electronic music s confrontation with a cultural impasse the failure of the future 23 Fisher stated that W hen cultural innovation has stalled and even gone backwards one function of hauntology is to keep insisting that there are futures beyond postmodernity s terminal time When the present has given up on the future we must listen for the relics of the future in the unactivated potentials of the past 24 Hauntological music is stated by academic Sean Albeiz to suggest an uncanny mixture of shared but faded cultural memories with sinister undercurrents 1 Hauntology along with the hypnagogic movement was likened to sonic fictions or intentional forgeries creating half baked memories of things that never were approximating the imprecise nature of memory itself 25 See also EditDeconstruction DefamiliarizationReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j Albiez Sean 2017 Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Volume 11 Bloomsbury pp 347 349 ISBN 9781501326103 Retrieved 10 January 2020 Reynolds Simon Why Burial s Untrue Is the Most Important Electronic Album of the Century So Far Pitchfork Retrieved 14 January 2020 a b c d e f Reynolds Simon HAUNTED AUDIO a k a SOCIETY OF THE SPECTRAL Ghost Box Mordant Music and Hauntology The Wire Retrieved 10 January 2020 a b c d Daniels Alexandria A Study of Hauntology in Berbarian Sound Studio Talk Film Society Retrieved 10 January 2020 a b c Whiteley Sheila Rambarran Shara 22 January 2016 The Oxford Handbook of Music and Virtuality Oxford University Press p 412 Fisher Mark The Metaphysics of Crackle Afrofuturism and Hauntology Dance Cult McLeod Ken 2015 Hip Hop Holograms Afrofuturism 2 0 The Rise of Astro Blackness Lexington ISBN 9781498510516 Retrieved 14 January 2020 a b Rodgers Jude 24 August 2019 Dummy wasn t a chillout album Portishead had more in common with Nirvana The Guardian Retrieved 24 August 2019 Reynolds Simon Why Burial s Untrue Is the Most Important Electronic Album of the Century So Far Pitchfork Retrieved 14 January 2020 Harper Adam 27 October 2009 Hauntology The Past Inside The Present Retrieved 13 January 2020 a b Sexton Jamie 2012 Weird Britain in Exile Ghost Box Hauntology and Alternative Heritage Popular Music and Society 35 4 561 584 doi 10 1080 03007766 2011 608905 S2CID 191619593 Retrieved 10 January 2020 Fisher Mark The Metaphysics of Crackle Afrofuturism and Hauntology Dance Cult Without using either term Penman s 1995 essay showed that Afrofuturism and hauntology are two sides of the same double faced phenomenon Fisher Mark 26 April 2010 Ariel Pink Russian roulette Fact Reynolds Simon Why Boards of Canada s Music Has the Right to Children Is the Greatest Psychedelic Album of the 90s Pitchfork Media Retrieved 3 April 2018 Little Britain actor Paul Putner lets us leaf through his record collection 8 February 2017 Reynolds Simon 2012 Retromania Pop Culture s Addiction to its Own Past London Faber amp Faber pp 333 335 ISBN 978 0571232093 Retrieved 4 February 2019 Weiss Dan 6 July 2012 Slutwave Tumblr Rap Rape Gaze Obscure Musical Genres Explained LA Weekly Gabrielle Timothy 22 August 2010 Chilled to Spill How The Oil Spill Ruined Chillwave s Summer Vacation PopMatters Retrieved 10 January 2020 a b Bell David Deserter s Songs Looking Backwards In Defence of Nostalgia Ceasefire Mag Retrieved 17 August 2016 Eddebo Johan 24 June 2017 In search of lost time Catholic Insight https web archive org web 20211201135103 https www wired com 2011 07 musica globalista simon reynolds on undead hauntology Sprod Liam 11 May 2012 Against All Ends Hauntology Aesthetics Ontology 3 AM Magazine Retrieved 14 January 2020 Evans Polly 3 February 2017 Is electronic music a threat to culture Varsity Fisher Mark 2013 The Metaphysics of Crackle Afrofuturism and Hauntology Dancecult Journal of Electronic Dance Music Culture 5 2 42 Retrieved 13 January 2020 Simpson J 2015 Chapter Three The Disintegration Loops Hauntology amp Hypnagogic Pop William Basinski Musician Snapshots The Music You Should Hear Series SBE Media Stone Blue Editors Retrieved 14 January 2020 Further reading EditReynolds Simon 15 October 2017 HAUNTOLOGY the GHOST BOX label Frieze 2005 Fisher Mark 17 January 2006 Hauntology Now k punk abstractdynamics org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hauntology music amp oldid 1130482580, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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