Authors: David Byrne
Tags: #Science, #History, #Non-Fiction, #Music, #Art
LP collections, they recorded radio programs and music that they played
or composed themselves. With two machines (or the soon not-uncommon
double-deck cassette machine), you could copy cassettes, one at a time, and
give the duplicates to friends.
Record companies tried to discourage “home taping,” as they called it.
They worried that people would record hit singles off the radio and never
have to buy their 45s again. They mounted a huge (and fairly ineffectual)
propaganda campaign that mainly served to alienate the consumer and
music fan from the companies that sold pre-recorded music. “Home Taping
Is Killing Music” was their slogan. I myself occasionally bought pre-recorded DAV I D BY R N E | 109
audiocassettes, but mostly I still bought LPs. Like many of my friends, I’d
make mixtapes that consisted of my favorite songs in various genres, for
myself and others. Rather than lending out precious, fragile, and bulky LPs, we’d exchange cassettes of our favorite songs, each tape focusing on a specific genre, theme, artist, or mood. There was a lot of nerdy musical categorizing going on. Pocket-sized audio wonder cabinets. I found out about a lot of artists and whole styles of music through the cassettes given to me by my friends, and I ended up buying more LPs as a result.
The mixtapes we made for ourselves were musical mirrors. The sadness,
anger, or frustration you might be feeling at a given time could be encapsu-
lated in the song selection. You made mixtapes that corresponded to emo-
tional states, and they’d be available to pop into the deck when each feeling needed reinforcing or soothing. The mixtape was your friend, your psychia-trist, and your solace.
Mixtapes were a form of potlatch—the Native American custom by
which a gift given requires that a reciprocal gift be received in the future.
I’d make you a mixtape of my favorite songs—presumably ones you would
like and might not already have or know about—and you’d be expected to
make a similar tape for me of songs you think I’d like. The reciprocal giving wasn’t super time-sensitive, but you couldn’t forget. The gift of a mixtape
was very personal. Often they were made for exactly one person, no one
else. A radio program with one listener. Each song, carefully chosen, with
love and humor, as if to say, “This is who I am, and by this tape you will
know me better.” The song choice and sequence allowed the giver to say
what one might be too shy to say outright. The songs contained on a mix-
tape from a lover were scrutinized carefully for clues and metaphors that
might reveal the nuances and deeper meanings secreted in the emotional
cargo. Other people’s music—ordered and collected in infinitely imaginative
ways—became a new form of expression.
Record companies wanted to take all that away from us. I taped songs off
the radio, just as the record companies feared I would. I carried a boombox on my first trip to Brazil, and every time something amazing came on the radio
I taped it. Later I’d ask who those singers or bands were, and then I’d begin a search and eventually buy their LPs. I even licensed some of them for release on a record label I had for a while. If I hadn’t been able to tape those radio programs, I would never found out who those artists were. I also recorded other 110 | HOW MUSIC WORKS
kinds of radio programs on cassettes: gospel music, preachers, exorcists, radio talk-show hosts, and radio dramas. The piles of cassettes got a little out of control, but they were a constant source of inspiration and they became tools in my own music-making process.
Boomboxes had built-in mics, and, maybe more significantly, they had
built-in compressors. A compressor is a bit of circuitry that squashes the
sound and effectively acts as an automatic volume control, so that louder
sounds are pushed down and quieter ones are brought up. For example, if
you recorded one big piano chord on your boombox, the attack—the loud
initial hit—would be smacked down, and, as the “tail” of the chord lingered, decayed, and got softer on playback, you would hear the circuitry trying to
make it louder. Almost as if someone were working a volume knob in a fran-
tic attempt to maintain a constant sound level. It’s a fairly unnatural effect when overused, but it’s also pretty cool, and can sometimes make amateur
recordings sound weirdly exciting. For a while I used boomboxes as compo-
sitional tools—recording band rehearsals and improvisations, which I would
later listen to and make note of the best parts, imagining how the good bits could be stitched together. The built-in compression had a huge influence on these decisions: by favoring some passages and making others sound terrible, it made invisible creative decisions.
Whole genres of music thrived as a result of cassettes. Punk bands that
couldn’t get a record deal resorted to churning out copies of homemade tapes and selling them at shows or by mail order. These second-and-third generation copies lost some quality—the high frequencies would inevitably be reduced,
and some dynamics would disappear as well, but no one seemed to care too
much. This technology favored music that has been described as either “ethe-
real, ambient or noisy.”16 I remember getting self-copied cassettes of Daniel Johnston’s songs that must have been copied multiple times. The audio quality sucked, and it seemed like he had “overdubbed” vocals or instrumental parts
on some songs while creating the recordings—all on cassette. It was an era of murky music. Quality was sliding down a slippery slope, but the freedom and
empowerment that was enabled by the technology made up for it.
Cassettes had different, though related effects in other parts of the world.
In India, the Gramophone Company virtually had a monopoly on the LP mar-
ket. It recorded only specific styles of music (mainly
ghazals
—love songs—
and some film songs), and they only worked with a handful or artists: Asha
DAV I D BY R N E | 111
Bhosle, Lata Mangeshkar, and a few others. Their stranglehold on recorded
music lasted until 1980, when the Indian government decided to allow cas-
settes to be imported. The effect was rapid and profound: smaller labels blossomed and other kinds of music and artists began to be heard. Soon 95 per-
cent of all commercial recordings in India were being released on cassettes.
This wholesale adoption of cassettes was the pattern in a lot of other coun-
tries as well. I have “commercial” cassettes that I treasure from Bali, Sudan, Ethiopia, and elsewhere. Sadly the quality is often atrocious; the copying
machines could have been misaligned, or the copies might have been made
hastily by the store or kiosk owner. But a lot of music got disseminated that never would have been heard without the cheap and reproducible cassette.
Another side effect of the cassette deluge was that many musical forms that
had been edited and shortened for disc recording could now return to something resembling their original form. Indian ragas last at least an hour, and though the side of a cassette tape is rarely that long, they can easily be quite a bit longer than the twenty-one minutes of the standard LP. Rai songs, the Algerian pop
format, can go as long as the performer and audience feel like (or can afford), so cutting them down to the three- to four-minute songs that were suitable for
disc and Western audiences killed the party before it could get started.
Wider and more ecumenical dissemination of cassettes wasn’t always
for the better. In Java, cassette recordings of local gamelan ensembles circulated widely. Before the advent of cassettes, every village had its own unique gamelan ensemble with its own instruments, each with their own idiosyncrasies. There were variations in the playing and arrangements as well. But
as cassettes of popular ensembles circulated, the styles became more homog-
enized. Similar patterns began to show up everywhere, and even the tuning of the gongs began to conform to those heard on the cassettes.17
There is always a tradeoff. As music gets disseminated, and distinct
regional voices find a way to be more widely heard, certain bands and singers (who might be more creative, or possibly have just been marketed by a bigger company) begin to dominate, and peculiar regional styles—what writer
Greil Marcus, echoing Harry Smith, called the “old weird America”—eventu-
ally end up getting squashed, neglected, abandoned, and often forgotten. This dissemination/homogenization process runs in all directions simultaneously;
it’s not just top-down repression of individuality and peculiarity. A recording by some previously obscure backwoods or southside singer can find its way
112 | HOW MUSIC WORKS
into the ear of a wide public, and an Elvis, Luiz Gonzaga, Woody Guthrie, or James Brown, can suddenly have a massive audience—what was once a local
style suddenly exerts a huge influence. Pop music can be thrown off its axis by some previously unknown and talented rapper from the projects. And then
the homogenization process begins again. There’s a natural ebb and flow to
these things, and it can be tricky to assign a value judgment based on a particular frozen moment in the never-ending cycle of change.
IN THE CLUB
Around 1976, 12” dance and DJ singles emerged. Because the grooves on
these oversized singles could be wider, and because they were spinning
as fast as a 45, they were louder than LPs that spun at 33RPM. I remember in the late seventies hearing how the low end (the sound of the kick drum and
bass) could be brought forward on this format and made louder. Discos had
speakers that could accommodate those frequencies, and they became a world
of throbbing, pulsing low end—an experience that had to wait for the CD and
digital recording to be experienced outside the club environment.
Low frequencies are felt as much as they are heard. We feel that bass in our chest and gut; the music physically moves our bodies. Beyond any audible and neurological apprehension of music, in the disco environment it was pum-meling and massaging us physically. These frequencies are sensuous, sexy,
and also a little dirty and dangerous.
At the same time that disco sound systems featured big bottoms, they also
featured arrays of tweeters—tiny speakers that could project over the heads of the dancers the extreme high frequencies present in a recording. While being massaged by the bass, these speakers were simultaneously filling the air with the sound of high hats flying around like a million needles. I suspect there was a drug connection as well; those high frequencies in particular sounded
sparkly fresh if you were on amyl nitrate or cocaine. Naturally enough, the
mixers in recording studios began to accommodate that drug-altered hearing
as well, and for a while in the eighties, a lot of records had piercing highend in their mixes. Ouch. Some artists worked exclusively in this style, and their music was made primarily to be heard over club-speaker systems. You’d
hear an amazing song in a club, but it just didn’t sound the same at home.
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Jamaican sound systems did the same thing. The huge sound of the bass and
the high-frequency chucks of the guitars and hi-hats left a gaping sonic hole in the middle of the music—a hole perfectly suited for toasters and MCs to
sing and rap over.
DJs in discos gravitated to 12” discs not just for the increased volume and
louder low end that the format could accommodate, but also as a medium
that could combine those features with what were then called “extended
mixes.” A club mix of a song would not only be more earth shaking sonically, but it was generally lengthened, and would contain breaks—sections where
the vocal and often much of the “song” disappeared, leaving only the groove.
A DJ could “extend” these breaks even further by playing the same record on
two turntables. They could switch from one turntable to the other, making
an instrumental break in the song segue into the same section on the other
copy, and then do the same in reverse, repeating the process over and over,
creating a break that was as long as he, she, the dancers, or an MC wanted.
As with early jazz, people beyond the actual musicians, like the dancers, were influencing the music.
Jamaicans were among the first to exploit these possibilities. When the
technology moved to Manhattan and the Bronx and was supplemented by
some breakdancers and an MC, you had early hip-hop. The beats changed
when they got to New York, but the principle was the same: repurpose a
medium that was originally created for listening to music, or for DJs to play in clubs, and then use it as a medium to make new music. Music eats its young
and gives birth to a new hybrid creature. I doubt there is a single hip-hop artist whose beats still originate from a DJ manipulating vinyl by hand, but the organizing principal hasn’t changed much in thirty years.
Rock musicians and their fans didn’t initially appreciate these develop-
ments. The reasons largely have to do with race and homophobia—many of
the most popular dance clubs were black, gay, or both. Part of the disdain
might have also stemmed from the idea that this new kind of music wasn’t
being made by traditional musicians. Drummers and guitar players weren’t
seen playing in these clubs, even though they were often audibly present on
the original records being spun. That complaint could be accurate and jus-
tified, though I don’t really think most of these grumbling rock fans were
that interested in or emotionally sympathetic to the employment situation of drummers and guitarists.