person:richard strauss

  • How music about space became music about drugs - MIT Technology Review
    https://www.technologyreview.com/s/613762/space-music-drugs

    The rock era and the space age exist on parallel time lines. The Soviets launched Sputnik in October 1957, the same month Elvis Presley hit #1 with “Jailhouse Rock.” The first Beatles single, “Love Me Do,” was released 23 days after John F. Kennedy declared that America would go to the moon (and not because it was easy, but because it was hard). Apollo 11 landed the same summer as Woodstock. These specific events are (of course) coincidences. Yet the larger arc is not. Mankind’s assault upon the heavens was the most dramatic achievement of the 20th century’s second half, simultaneous with rock’s transformation of youth culture. It does not take a deconstructionist to see the influence of the former on the latter. The number of pop lyrics fixated on the concept of space is massive, and perhaps even predictable. It was the language of the era. But what’s more complicated is what that concept came to signify, particularly in terms of how the silence of space was somehow supposed to sound.

    The principal figure in this conversation is also the most obvious: David Bowie. In a playlist of the greatest pop songs ever written about life beyond the stratosphere, 1969’s “Space Oddity” would be the opening cut, a musical experience so definitive that its unofficial sequel—the 1983 synth-pop “Major Tom (Coming Home)” by German one-hit wonder Peter Schilling—would probably be track number two. The lyrical content of “Space Oddity” is spoken more than sung, and the story is straightforward: an astronaut (Major Tom) rockets into space and something goes terribly wrong. It’s odd, in retrospect, that a song with such a pessimistic view of space travel would be released just 10 days before Neil Armstrong stepped on the lunar surface. That level of pessimism, however, would become the standard way for rock musicians to write about science. Outside of Sun Ra or Ace Frehley, it’s hard to find serious songs about space that aren’t framed as isolating or depressing.

    Space is a vacuum: the only song capturing the verbatim resonance of space is John Cage’s perfectly silent “4’33".” Any artist purporting to embody the acoustics of the cosmos is projecting a myth. That myth, however, is collective and widely understood. Space has no sound, but certain sounds are “spacey.” Part of this is due to “Space Oddity”; another part comes from cinema, particularly the soundtrack to 2001 (the epic power of classical music by Richard Strauss and György Ligeti). Still another factor is the consistent application of specific instruments, like the ondes martenot (a keyboard that vaguely simulates a human voice, used most famously in the theme to the TV show Star Trek). The shared assumptions about what makes music extraterrestrial are now so accepted that we tend to ignore how strange it is that we all agree on something impossible.

    Unsurprisingly, the ambiance of these tracks merged with psychedelic tendencies. The idea of “music about space” became shorthand for “music about drugs,” and sometimes for “music to play when you are taking drugs and thinking about space.” And this, at a base level, is the most accurate definition of the genre we now called space rock.

    The apotheosis of all the fake audio signifiers for interstellar displacement, Dark Side of the Moon (and its 1975 follow-up Wish You Were Here) perfected the synthesizer, defining it as the musical vehicle for soundtracking the future. Originally conceived as a way to replicate analog instruments, first-generation synthesizers saw their limitations become their paradoxical utility: though incapable of credibly simulating a real guitar, they could create an unreal guitar tone that was innovative and warmly inhuman. It didn’t have anything to do with actual astronomy, but it seemed to connote both the wonder and terror of an infinite universe. By now, describing pop music as “spacey” usually just means it sounds a little like Pink Floyd.

    What has happened, it seems, is that our primitive question about the moon’s philosophical proximity to Earth has been incrementally resolved. What once seemed distant has microscoped to nothingness. When rock music was new, space was new—and it seemed so far beyond us. Anything was possible. It was a creative dreamscape. But you know what? We eventually got there. We went to space so often that people got bored. The two Voyager craft had already drifted past Pluto before Nirvana released Nevermind in 1991. You can see a picture of a black hole in the New York Times. The notion that outer space is vast and unknowable has been replaced by the notion that space is exactly as it should be, remarkable as it is anodyne.

    #Musique #Espace #David_Bowie #Pink_Floyd

  • Mercredi ! Dans le #Cosmos // 12.12.2018
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/mercredi-/mercredi-dans-le-cosmos-12-12-2018-2

    Au programme ce mercredi !

    L’espace et le cosmos, un sujet qui interroge tant les Hommes. C’est Louise, Nolwenn et Hélène qui vont vous expliquer ce qu’on sait de cet univers si mystérieux.

    Les musiques de l’émission :

    Moteur-fusée - Marc de Blanchard

    Ainsi parlait zarathoustra - Richard Strauss

    Extrait du film Agora

    Crédit photo

    illustration par Minjeong Kang

    #Jeune_Public #Espace #Jeune_Public,Cosmos,Espace
    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/mercredi-/mercredi-dans-le-cosmos-12-12-2018-2_05850__1.mp3

  • Concerts : Flying Robot Rockstars ; le premier morceau - Also sprach Zarathustra, Friedrich Nietzsche, Richard Strauss -, repris dans le 2001 de Kubrick et qui servait d’entrée en scène à Elvis pour le concert à Hawaii en 1973 !
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qlqe1DXnJKQ


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqBiE0nUnMM

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ct4bFKwZJRo

    #musique #robots #zarathustra #kubrick #elvis

  • #Edward_Said, un humaniste à New York
    http://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2013/06/10/edward-said-un-humaniste-a-new-york_3426691_3232.html

    Il y a dix ans disparaissait le critique littéraire, pianiste et militant palestinien Edward Said. Professeur de la célèbre université Columbia, à New York, il était, comme son collègue l’historien du judaïsme Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi (Critique n° 763, 2011), une figure typique d’"outsider intégré", de « marginal dans le jeu », comme sait merveilleusement en produire le monde académique anglo-américain. Palestinien protestant, né en 1935 à Jérusalem, arrivé aux Etats-Unis en 1950, il incarnait la cause de la Palestine en intellectuel public.

    Inspirée par la philosophie du Michel Foucault de Surveiller et punir et - on le dit moins en France - par le philosophe allemand Adorno, théoricien pessimiste de la crise de la raison, l’oeuvre d’Edward Said comporte bien des facettes, que les auteurs de ce numéro savent nous dévoiler. Ainsi, nous dit Marielle Macé, Edward Said, spécialiste d’un autre exilé, le romancier britannique d’origine polonaise Joseph Conrad, s’intéressa au « style tardif » des musiciens et des poètes : les derniers quatuors de Beethoven à la limite de la dissonance, le « retour » au XVIIIe siècle d’un Stravinsky ou du Richard Strauss de Cappriccio (1942), le Baudelaire apocalyptique des Fusées (1851) ou le cinéaste communiste Pasolini des Ecrits corsaires (1976), néoréactionnaire avant la lettre. Le musicologue Esteban Buch passe enfin au crible la production d’Edward Said – critique musical de l’hebdomadaire de gauche The Nation. Il débusque avec malice, chez ce révolté de l’esprit et de la politique, malgré tout, un certain classicisme.

    Critique n° 793-794 : Edward W. Said
    http://www.leseditionsdeminuit.fr/f/index.php?sp=liv&livre_id=2913

    Qui était Edward Said ? La question peut sembler incongrue en cette année de commémorations liées au dixième anniversaire de sa disparition. Palestinien, chrétien, il a grandi entre Jérusalem et Le Caire. L’exil de sa famille le fixe aux États-Unis. Universitaire, spécialiste de Joseph Conrad, son domaine est la littérature comparée. C’est avec la publication d’Orientalism, en 1978, que son travail bascule et que change sa stature. Le discret professeur de Columbia est désormais commenté dans le monde entier, tenu pour l’initiateur des « études postcoloniales » et considéré comme la voix intellectuelle de la Palestine.
    Orientalism a été rapidement traduit en français sans que la France s’ouvre beaucoup à ce penseur cosmopolite. Le reste de l’oeuvre reste largement à découvrir. Des éditeurs s’y emploient et c’est d’abord de ces traductions longtemps attendues que nous rendons compte. Les surprises n’y manquent pas. Car l’écriture politique n’a représenté qu’un moment de la trajectoire de Said. On découvrira ici d’autres facettes d’une oeuvre souvent réduite à un seul livre : de l’analyse des médias à la critique musicale en passant par une réflexion sur le « style tardif ».
    C’est un nouveau portrait d’Edward Said, libéré des surinterprétations louangeuses ou réprobatrices, qu’esquisse ce numéro – pour mieux revenir aux questions qu’il a su poser.

    #livre #littérature #musique #orientalisme