How Björk Broke the Sound Barrier

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How Björk broke the sound barrier The Guardian · February 15, 2015 A few years ago, for a feature on a music blog, I asked Björk to make a selection of her favourite records. Her list included Mahler’s 10th Symphony; Alban Berg’sLulu; Steve Reich’s Tehillim; a collection of Thai pop, entitled Siamese Soul, Volume 2; Alim Qasimov’s Azerbaijan: The Art of the Mugham; Joni Mitchell’s Don Juan’s Reckless Daughter; Kate Bush’s The Dreaming; Nico’s Desertshore; Public Enemy’s It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back; Aphex Twin’s Drukqs; the Ranges’ Panasonic EP; Black Dog Productions’ Bytes and James Blake’s debut album, James Blake. What’s striking about the list is not just the breadth of Björk’s taste – this is no surprise, given her obsessive curiosity about every corner of the musical world – but also the animated map of genres that materialises in the background. It is as though, in a reversal of tectonic drift, isolated land masses of taste were re-forming as a supercontinent. A grandiose howl of late Romantic agony; a juggernaut of 12-tone modernism; a cool minimalist dance through Hebrew psalms; off- kilter pop from south Asia; a virtuoso survey of Azerbaijani mugham; three defiantly idiosyncratic albums by female singer-songwriters; three pathbreaking electronic records; a raging tour-de-force of political hip-hop; a collection of dubstep ballads: Björk’s list circumnavigates the globe and, at the same time, it overruns the boundaries separating art from pop, mainstream from underground, primeval past from hi-tech present. The partition of music into distinct genres, each with its own history, philosophy and body of technique, is a relatively recent development. Before a global marketplace emerged, with the advent of recording technology in the late 19th century, there was little talk of the classical, the popular and subdivisions thereof, although the language of music was seen to vary widely from nation to nation and from city to city. Shakespeare employed the word “music” with blissful vagueness: “If music be the food of love, play on.” He apparently felt no need to specify what kind of music might feed a lusty ear. Rousseau, in his Dictionary of Music, noted that tastes varied widely – “One is most touched by pathetic pieces, another prefers gay Tunes” – but nonetheless spoke of a “general Taste upon which all well-constituted people are agreed”. The possibility of such a consensus now seems remote. The musical landscape teems with genres: classical, jazz, folk, blues, gospel, country, Latin, R&B, funk, soul, hip-hop, rock, metal, punk, pop and dozens of national and regional varieties. Recording technology has surely fuelled this explosion of typologies: once a piece of music becomes a circulating commodity, it requires classification, so that one can know what section of the record store to put it in or, in latterday terms, what tag to place in its metadata. Furthermore, each genre has its own subgenres and ideological schisms. Popular music is regularly riven by debates between acolytes of classic guitar rock and devotees of newer pop genres that make sophisticated use of digital manipulation. Contemporary classical music exhibits a long-running conflict between tonally oriented composers and those who still pursue Schoenberg’s high-modernist “emancipation of

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Björk interview

Transcript of How Björk Broke the Sound Barrier

  • How Bjrk broke the sound barrier

    The Guardian February 15, 2015

    A few years ago, for a feature on a music blog, I asked Bjrk to make a selection of her favourite records. Her list included

    Mahlers 10th Symphony; Alban BergsLulu; Steve Reichs Tehillim; a collection of Thai pop, entitled Siamese Soul,

    Volume 2; Alim Qasimovs Azerbaijan: The Art of the Mugham; Joni Mitchells Don Juans Reckless Daughter; Kate

    Bushs The Dreaming; Nicos Desertshore; Public Enemys It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back; Aphex

    Twins Drukqs; the Ranges Panasonic EP; Black Dog Productions Bytes and James Blakes debut album, James Blake.

    Whats striking about the list is not just the breadth of Bjrks taste this is no surprise, given her obsessive curiosity

    about every corner of the musical world but also the animated map of genres that materialises in the background. It is

    as though, in a reversal of tectonic drift, isolated land masses of taste were re-forming as a supercontinent. A grandiose

    howl of late Romantic agony; a juggernaut of 12-tone modernism; a cool minimalist dance through Hebrew psalms; off-

    kilter pop from south Asia; a virtuoso survey of Azerbaijani mugham; three defiantly idiosyncratic albums by female

    singer-songwriters; three pathbreaking electronic records; a raging tour-de-force of political hip-hop; a collection of

    dubstep ballads: Bjrks list circumnavigates the globe and, at the same time, it overruns the boundaries separating art

    from pop, mainstream from underground, primeval past from hi-tech present.

    The partition of music into distinct genres, each with its own history, philosophy and body of technique, is a relatively

    recent development. Before a global marketplace emerged, with the advent of recording technology in the late 19th

    century, there was little talk of the classical, the popular and subdivisions thereof, although the language of music was

    seen to vary widely from nation to nation and from city to city. Shakespeare employed the word music with blissful

    vagueness: If music be the food of love, play on. He apparently felt no need to specify what kind of music might feed a

    lusty ear. Rousseau, in his Dictionary of Music, noted that tastes varied widely One is most touched by pathetic pieces,

    another prefers gay Tunes but nonetheless spoke of a general Taste upon which all well-constituted people are

    agreed.

    The possibility of such a consensus now seems remote. The musical landscape teems with genres: classical, jazz, folk,

    blues, gospel, country, Latin, R&B, funk, soul, hip-hop, rock, metal, punk, pop and dozens of national and regional

    varieties. Recording technology has surely fuelled this explosion of typologies: once a piece of music becomes a

    circulating commodity, it requires classification, so that one can know what section of the record store to put it in or, in

    latterday terms, what tag to place in its metadata. Furthermore, each genre has its own subgenres and ideological

    schisms. Popular music is regularly riven by debates between acolytes of classic guitar rock and devotees of newer pop

    genres that make sophisticated use of digital manipulation. Contemporary classical music exhibits a long-running

    conflict between tonally oriented composers and those who still pursue Schoenbergs high-modernist emancipation of

  • the dissonance. Music is far from being a universal language, as Arthur Schopenhauer once defined it; to the contrary,

    no art stirs more heated debate.

    Shortly before his death, in 1992, John Cage said: We live in a time I think not of mainstream, but of many streams, or

    even, if you insist, upon a river of time, that we have come to delta, maybe even beyond delta to an ocean which is going

    back to the skies. Stream, delta, border, boundary: we keep reaching for geographical metaphors as we speak of genres

    and we sense that the real landscape of musical activity ultimately has little to do with our tidy delineations, or indeed

    with the dismantling of them. Fluid and shifting, music is spread out like populations around urban centres, and certain

    communities could plausibly be assigned to one citys suburbs or to anothers. Genre may be a kind of gerrymandering

    practised by musical politicians. Indeed, composers routinely complain when they are described as busters of genre or

    crossers of boundaries; they tend to view themselves simply as artists working with various kinds of material. The jazz

    composer Michael Gibbs may have summed it up best when he said: There is a fusion going on every time somebody

    writes music. The idea of fusion keeps materialising and disappearing before our ears, a mirage generated by the limited

    ability of language to account for what we hear.

    In the intersecting tributaries of Bjrks work, there is a glimpse of the delta that Cage described at the end of his life

    whether or not Cage himself would have been able to wrap his mind around her music. He died the year before Bjrk

    released her first solo album, 1993s Debut, in which she began in earnest her fierce dance across the continents of genre.

    You hear first a bouncing riff sampled from an Antnio Carlos JobimQuincy Jones soundtrack, its syncopated beat

    consigned to a venerable orchestral instrument, the timpani. Over this pattern, Bjrk sings a gloriously odd opening line:

    If you ever get close to a human and human behaviour, be ready to get confused. The voice exists somewhere on the

    continuum from the folkish to the operatic; less by calculation than by default, it lands in the middle ground of pop.

    Bjrks Icelandic origins almost certainly contributed to her quizzical, questing approach to musical identity. She

    belonged to a geographically isolated society in which centuries-old folk traditions remained strong and in which young

    people passed the time singing in choral groups, as generations before them had done. Somehow, we missed out on the

    Industrial Revolution and modernism and postmodernism, Bjrk recently told me. We are jumping straight from

    colonialism we got our independence only in 1944 into the 21st century. We could enjoy a still almost untouched

    natural landscape and draw upon it as we headbutted our way into a green, techno, internet age.

    All the latest products of western culture were readily available to Bjrks generation and to those who came after. Yet

    these shiny commodities could be assembled in eccentric formations. The up to date mingled with the obsolescent and

    the ancient. Despite Bjrks enthusiasm for the latest developments in the digital arena and her painstaking attention to

    the minutiae of studio production, there is much in her music that feels rough-hewn, homemade, pre-technological.

  • Classical music loomed large in her early years. From the age of five, she attended the Barnamsikskli in Reykjavk (a

    childrens music school now called the Tnmenntaskli), where she studied theory and history, sang in choirs and played

    the flute. (The boxset collection Family Tree contains a fragment of Bjrks flute playing: a sinuous little piece from 1980,

    called Glora.) The focus on a canonical repertory of Bach, Mozart and Beethoven frustrated her. I remember being

    almost the fighter in the school, the odd kid out, she once said. But a teacher named Snorri Sigfs Birgisson excited her

    imagination by introducing her to major 20th-century composers: Schoenberg, Messiaen, Stockhausen, Cage. Early on,

    she made her own attempts at avant-garde composition, creating pieces from sonic found objects such as a tape of her

    grandfather snoring.

    Related: Bjrk: Vulnicura review heavy yet compelling

    The art of singing often consists in hiding the physicality of the voice the noise of the breath, the click of the tongue, the

    croak of the throat, the innumerable nuances that fall between the 12 chromatic tones. Bjrk, by contrast, has never tried

    to disguise that visceral aspect: her voice has a raw, abrupt, outdoor character, even at its airiest and most unearthly.

    While you can hear intimations of that sound in her earliest recordings, she laboured for many years to refine the vocal

    presence that so often elicits adjectives such as organic, natural, authentic. The development of the voice went hand

    in hand with her emergence as a songwriter and as a producer of complex electronic and instrumental textures.

    While artists as various as Maria Callas and Joni Mitchell shaped her sense of the capabilities of the voice, perhaps the

    most enduring influence on Bjrks career, from Debut to 2011s Biophilia and beyond, has come from the American

    composer, singer, dancer and theatre artist Meredith Monk, who shares with Bjrk a fundamental unclassifiability, a

    tendency to invade the interstices of institutionalised culture. Monk belongs to the great vanguard of artists and

    musicians who thrived in the unheated lofts and makeshift galleries of downtown Manhattan in the 1960s and 70s.

    Where so many of her contemporaries, including Steve Reich and Philip Glass, adopted a cool, impassive mien, Monk

    brought a touch of ritual mysticism to the New York avant-garde, cultivating an otherworldly yet piercingly immediate

    vocal style that suggested some lost, nameless folk culture. She aimed for a voice as flexible as the spine and connected

    it to a self-invented dance vocabulary and a mobile theatre of gesture and image. The resulting work caused a certain

    panic in critical circles: the New York Times once sent a trio of music, dance and theatre writers to assess her.

    Monk provided a clear precedent for Bjrk, even if the two artists seem to inhabit fundamentally different worlds. Having

    admired each other from a distance and exchanged letters over the years, Bjrk and Monk finally met in 2005, in a

    conversation mediated by the pianist Sarah Cahill. Bjrk described her early encounter, at around age 16, with Monks

    1981 album Dolmen Music, which gives perhaps the purest demonstration of her invented-folk style. Bjrk recalled that

    until that point she hadnt been greatly interested in vocal music, preferring the buzzing complexity of instruments and

    electronics.

  • But Monk showed what could be achieved when the voice alone, divorced or distanced from language, is treated as the

    most malleable of instruments. The two found other common ground: a family tradition of collective singing; an early

    love for Cage; a tendency to compose while walking outdoors; an abiding interest in how the voice is linked to the body.

    Bjrk resists being called a composer, even if she has drawn extensively on the notational classical tradition. The cult of

    the solitary genius is alien to her. Instead, she sees her work as an essentially collaborative enterprise, one that calls for

    an entire community of musicians, studio technicians, instrument makers, producers, programmers, videographers,

    fashion designers and other creative individuals. She is not the kind of pop star who makes a game of donning masks and

    disguises; her vocal identity has changed remarkably little over two decades as a solo artist. But almost everything else

    has changed: the instrumentation, the arrangements, the production techniques. Her albums tend to react against one

    another, with extroverted moods giving way to intimacies, dense textures followed by transparent ones.

    A snapshot of Bjrk as a child. Photograph: Hildur Hauksdttir

    To a great extent, Bjrks career can be narrated in terms of her collaborations. In the early and mid-1990s she was living

    in London, keeping close tabs on the citys club scene. Debut and Post had purring trip-hop beats layered beneath the

    sinuous strings of Talvin Singh and more opulent parts that Bjrk co-arranged with Eumir Deodato. On Homogenic,

    from 1997, the late producer Mark Bell became a crucial member of Bjrks team, injecting cooler, more brittle timbres;

    for Vespertine, in 2001, Bjrk brought in the avant-garde harpist Zeena Parkins and the electronic duo Matmos;

    and Medlla, in 2004, involved, among others, the avant-garde rock vocalist Mike Patton, the Inuit throat-singer Tagaq,

    and the human beatboxes Dokaka and Rahzel.

    Biophilia, from 2011, is perhaps Bjrks most ambitious project to date. Part-album, part-stage spectacle, part iPad-app

    emporium, part new instrument laboratory and part school curriculum, it is almost Stockhausen-like in its joyous

    disregard for the constraints of genre. As often before, Bjrk set about mapping the intersection of art, nature and

    technology, presenting analogies between scientific and musical elements. Crystalline compares crystal structures to the

    efflorescence of songs from small motifs; Solstice likens swinging pendulums to overlapping contrapuntal lines; and

    Virus, whose folk-like melody seems to come from the depths of the centuries, has an unstable, ever-shifting

    accompaniment that suggests cells subdividing and multiplying. The battery of bespoke instruments includes

    the gameleste, a Midi-controlled device that incorporates gamelan-like bronze bars in a celeste housing; and the

    Sharpsichord, a 46-string automatic harp controlled by a pin cylinder.

    The circle of colleagues now included the organ craftsman Bjrgvin Tmasson, the sound sculptor Henry Dagg, the

    percussionists Matt Nolan and Manu Delago, the engineer and programmer Damian Taylor, and the sound-artist and

    educator Curver. They joined such long-time confederates as Zeena Parkins, Matthew Herbert, Mark Bell, the Icelandic

  • poet Sjn, and the Iranian producer Leila Arab. Grownup audiences thrilled to the hi-tech spectacle that Bjrk unleashed

    in live performance plasma bolts zapping inside a Tesla coil, producing organ-like blasts of sound but most of all she

    wished to serve the starved imaginations of schoolchildren, many of whom now enter adulthood without having studied

    music in school.

    I want the kids to feel like theyre superheroes of sound, she told me, before a series of performances at the New York

    Hall of Science, in Queens, in 2012. One afternoon, I watched as a group of kids from Queens middle schools raced

    around playing with the instruments and the attendant software, their eyes glittering with unsuspected possibilities.

    Vulnicura, just released, may be the most emotionally direct work of Bjrks career, recording, with blistering candor, the

    breakup of her relationship with the artist Matthew Barney. At the same time, it marks another stage in her musical

    evolution, with the 10-minute expanse of Black Lake presenting one of her most intricately layered compositional

    conceptions to date. All these records document both an intellectual journey and a personal, psychological one. How the

    work matches up with the life is a subject on which only the artist herself can speak with authority; what matters for the

    listener is the sense that each song is an attempt to transmit honestly and unabashedly an inward state, rather than to

    concoct a calculated, knowing image for the outside world. As in Schuberts final string quartet or Bergs Lyric Suite, the

    music has a seismographic action, recording shocks and sensations that we may not see firsthand.

    This is an edited extract from an essay by Alex Ross (Beyond Delta: The Many Streams of Bjrk) in Bjrk:

    Archives published by Thames & Hudson (2 March, 40) with other contributions by Klaus Biesenbach, Nicola Dibben,

    Timothy Morton and Sjn. Bjrk, the exhibition, opens 8 March at MoMA, New York

    Art and soul: Bjrks creative debt to Iceland

    For the forthcoming retrospective of her work at MoMA in New York, Bjrk created, with director Andrew Thomas

    Huang, the work Black Lake, which was filmed on location in Iceland during the summer of 2014. The shows

    curator,Klaus Biesenbach,watched it being made

    Black Lake is an 11-minute looped composition that deals with the expression of the pain that Bjrk went through during

    her separation [in 2013] from artist Matthew Barney. For the video, she worked with choreographer Erna marsdttir on

    expressive, dance-like movements, through which she palpably exorcised her pain.

    I sat in the prep trailer during filming in the Icelandic landscape. In the background, behind a curtain, Bjrk was tuning

    her voice, exercising the width and capacity of her vocal spectrum, before leaving the trailer clad in a dress made out of a

    woven copper wire fabric to sing in a freezing, water-dripping cave. The camera crew and director were covered in layers

  • of coats, but Bjrk was doing take after take, standing in her bare feet on cold wet sand. For each take there was no lip-

    synching; she sang live, loud and real.

    Outside the cave, the prep trailer, the set, walking through the lava fields of Iceland, you are as a human being by far the

    tallest living object. There are no trees, no large animals, just moss and very low-growing vegetation. Coming across rocks

    feels like the only encounter of an equal volume, another object standing across from you, the human being. All of a

    sudden, it becomes clear that for all of her career Bjrk has created a body of work in which the landscape around her,

    she herself and the landscape inside of her her blood, her organs, the sounds made by her and perceived by her are all

    one universe of objects and subjects, subjects and objects, robots and humans, plants and animals, stone and volcanoes

    and oceans at the same time.

    Bjrk was born in 1965, during the four-year volcanic eruption that caused the formation of the Icelandic island Surtsey.

    Red-hot flowing lava formed a rocky island that was soon colonised by seeds that were washed ashore. These seeds

    brought the dead island into the cycles of life. At the end of filming Black Lake, the Icelandic volcano Brarbunga

    erupted under a glacier, again bringing together scorching liquid with centuries-old glacier ice and generating new rocks

    out of the cooling magma.

    Bjrk: Archives (Thames & Hudson)

    The Guardian February 15, 2015