How Music Works (60 page)

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Authors: David Byrne

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instrument it was written for. And so on, until everyone reached the end,

which was when everyone had exhausted all the little parts. It took about an hour. The result was textural, a landscape, and not melodic. A wash of one

kind of sound would surround you, its nature specific to whatever instru-

ments were being played, and then slowly the sound environment would

segue into a new texture, as players here and there decided to move on.

The audience was free to wander around, and the players were spread all

over—there was no “stage,” and therefore no central focus. I’d compare the

experience to watching weather, to seeing clouds build up on the horizon,

come closer, and gradually grow darker, take on an ominous texture, and

then burst, releasing a torrent of water, and then just as quickly they would move on and the sky would become clear again. It wasn’t like Cage, but it

was also a way of sensing and experiencing that the world is music, a com-

position of sorts, and not a predetermined one.

In the sixties, composer Terry Riley used to give all-night concerts in

which he’d create sonic environments by improvising (within strict param-

eters) to tape loops. The audiences would often bring sleeping bags and

doze through parts of the “concert.” (Shades of Bing Muscio and Satie with

their ignorable music.) When Riley needed a bathroom break, he’d let the

loops continue without him. Rhys Chatham and Glenn Branca created simi-

lar soundscapes for massed guitars—wonderful experiences that evoke the

thrum of a highway overpass or a steel foundry. In 2006, I saw the band

SunnO))), who theatricalized this experience—they played a concert in a

former church. Their music consists of monstrously loud drones that swell

and roll over the audience while the perfomers stand with their guitars in

front of a wall of stacked guitar amps, dressed as a group of hooded Druids.

There are no drums and no songs, not as we know them. Ritual was back or

maybe it never went away. The sound of SunnO))) is amazing—the beautiful

dark side of ambience.

330 | HOW MUSIC WORKS

SELF-ORGANIZING MUSIC

Maybe there’s a logical end to the path I’m going down here. If music is

inherent in all things and places, then why not let music play itself? The

composer, in the traditional sense, might no longer be necessary. Let the planets and spheres spin. Musician Bernie Krause has just come out with a book about

“biophony”—the world of music and sounds made by animals, insects, and

the nonhuman environment. Music made by self-organizing systems means

that anyone or anything can make it, and anyone can walk away from it. Cage

said the contemporary composer “resembles the maker of a camera who allows

someone else to take the picture.”12 That’s sort of the elimination of authorship, at least in the accepted sense. He felt that traditional music, with its scores that instruct which note should be played and when, are not reflections of the processes and algorithms that activate and create the world around us. The world indeed offers us restricted possibilities and opportunities, but there are always options, and more than one way for things to turn out. He and others wondered if maybe music might partake of this emergent process.

A small device made in China takes this idea one step further. The Buddha

Machine is a music player that uses random algorithms to organize a series

of soothing tones and thereby create never-ending, non-repeating melodies.

The programmer who made the device and organized its sounds replaces the

composer, effectively leaving no performer. The composer, the instrument, and the performer are all one machine. These are not very sophisticated devices, though one can envision a day when all types of music might be machine-generated. The basic, commonly used patterns that occur in various genres could become the algorithms that guide the manufacture of sounds. One might view

much of corporate pop and hip-hop as being machine-made—their formulas

are well established, and one need only choose from a variety of available hooks and beats, and an endless recombinant stream of radio-friendly music emerges.

Though this industrial approach is often frowned on, its machine-made nature could just as well be a compliment—it returns musical authorship to the ether.

All these developments imply that we’ve come full circle: we’ve returned to the idea that our universe might be permeated with music.

I welcome the liberation of music from the prison of melody, rigid struc-

ture, and harmony. Why not? But I also listen to music that does adhere to

those guidelines. Listening to the Music of the Spheres might be glorious,

DAV I D BY R N E | 331

but I crave a concise song now and then, a narrative or a snapshot more than a whole universe. I can enjoy a movie or read a book in which nothing much

happens, but I’m deeply conservative as well—if a song establishes itself

within the pop genre, then I listen with certain expectations. I can become

bored more easily by a pop song that doesn’t play by its own rules than by a contemporary composition that is repetitive and static. I like a good story and I also like staring at the sea—do I have to choose between the two?

332 | HOW MUSIC WORKS

a c k n o w l e d g m e n t s

a c k n o w l e d g m e n t s

Many years ago, while on tour, I sent Dave Eggers some journal entries

from the road for his amusement—from Eastern Europe, I believe

it was. They were possibly sent by fax; it was that long ago. Dave thought

they shed light on what a touring musician’s life was really like—a peek

into a world he felt hadn’t been revealed previously. This was encourag-

ing and exciting feedback, but it was also before the era of blogging, so my missives remained unpublished, though a few anecdotes managed to sneak

into my previous book about bikes and cities. Dave’s enthusiasm planted a

seed that I might write about music someday. But I had many trepidations

about going down that road—the “aging rocker bio” is a crowded shelf—and

I resisted for a long time, but it seems the day is here. I think I managed to give a sense that the world of music is wider than my personal experience,

but my experience figures in here too.

Scott Moyers, who is now at Penguin Press, did the first rough edit and

helped restructure this thing. Then it moved on to the McSweeney’s team:

Ethan Nosowsky has been the principal editor. Adam Krefman, Dave Eggers

(cover design), Chelsea Hogue, and Walter Green all helped with content,

design (Walter did most of the interior layout), and the time-consuming image licensing. My own office, Todomundo, has kept this project on track over quite a few years—LeeAnn Rossi has been involved in overall coordination, and Frank Hendler helped with the music business research in chapter seven, as did my

manager, David Whitehead. My business managers, Lia Sweet, Nan Lanigan,

and Illene Bashinsky, were also hugely helpful in our attempts to decode

and present the finances of musicians and to explain as clearly as possible a transparent accounting history of a couple of my own projects.

My literary agent, Andrew Wylie, was understanding when I explained

that this book was going to be neither an autobiography nor a series of think pieces—but a little bit of both. Now that it’s done, it’s a little easier to explain.

Thanks to Sally Singer for insisting I go through it one more time. Thanks

too to the folks who have allowed use of their photos, quotations, and dia-

grams, and to the rights holders of the music snippets included in the ebook.

DAV I D BY R N E | 335

n o t e s

Chapter One:
Creation in Reverse

1

Folk Song Style and Culture,
by Alan Lomax, Transaction Publishers, 1978.

2

“Why So Serious?” by Alex Ross,
The New Yorker
, September 8, 2008.

3

“Bird Songs,” by Gareth Huw Davies, in David Attenborough’s program,
The Life of
Birds
, PBS.
www.pbs.org/lifeofbirds/songs/index.html.

4

“The relation of geographical variation in song to habitat characteristics and body size in North American Tanagers,” by Eyal Shy,
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
vol. 12, Number 1, 71–76.

5

“How City Noise Is Reshaping Birdsong,” by David Biello,
Scientific American
, October 22, 2009.

6

Survival of the Beautiful: Art, Science and Evolution
, by David Rothenberg,

Bloomsbury Press, 2011, p. 6.

Chapter Two:
My Life in Performance

1

“Creativity and psychopathology: A study of 291 world-famous men,” by Felix Post,
The British Journal of Psychiatry
(1994) 165: 22–24.

Chapter Three:
Technology Shapes Music:
Analog

1

“The Heleocentric Pantheon: An Interview with Walter Murch,” by Geoff Manaugh,
BLDG Blog
, April 2007.
http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2007/04/heliocentric-pantheon-interview-with.html.

2

Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music
, by Mark Katz, University of California Press,
2010, p. 13.

3

Perfecting Sound Forever: An Aural History of Recorded Music
, by Greg Milner, Faber & Faber, 2010, p. 14.

4

Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music,
by Mark Katz, University of California Press, 2010, p.60.

5

“The Menace of Mechanical Music,” by John Philip Sousa, originally published in
Appleton’s Magazine
vol. 8, 1906, p. 278.
www.phonozoic.net/n0155.htm.

336 | HOW MUSIC WORKS

n o t e s

6

Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music
, by Mark Katz, University of California Press, p. 17.

7

Perfecting Sound Forever: An Aural History of Recorded Music
, by Greg Milner, Faber & Faber, 2010, p. 60.

8

Si sos brujo: A Tango Story
, Caroline Neal, Cinemateca, 2005. DVD.

9

Perfecting Sound Forever: An Aural History of Recorded Music
, by Greg Milner, Faber & Faber, 2010, p. 78.

10

Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music
, by Mark Katz, University of California Press, p. 74–75.

11

“Wiring the World: Acoustical Engineers and the Empire of Sound in the Motion Picture Industry, 1927–1930,” by Emily Thompson, in
Hearing Cultures: Essays on
Sound, Listening and Modernity
, Veir Erlmann, ed., Berg Publishers, p. 198.

12

Ibid, p. 201.

13

Ibid, p. 202.

14

“The Prospects of Recording,” by Glenn Gould, in
High Fidelity
vol. 16, no. 4, April 1966, p. 46–63.

15 Ibid.

16

“Thanks for the Memorex,” by Hua Hsu,
ArtForum
, February 2011.

17

Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music
,
by Mark Katz, University of California Press, 2010, p. 12.

Chapter Four:
Technology Shapes Music:
Digital

1

Perfecting Sound Forever: An Aural History of Recorded Music
, by Greg Milner, Faber & Faber, 2010, p. 258–261.

2

Ibid, p. 268.

3

Ibid, p. 207–208.

4

“Thinking About Sound, Proximity, and Distance in Western Experience: The Case of Odysseus’s Walkman,” by Michael Bull, in
Hearing Cultures: Essays on Sound, Listening
and Modernity
, Veir Erlmann, ed., Berg Publishers, p. 174.

5

Ibid, p. 176.

DAV I D BY R N E | 337

Chapter Five:
In The Recording Studio

1

“The Prospects of Recording,” by Glenn Gould, in
High Fidelity
vol. 16, no. 4, April 1966.

Chapter Six:
Collaborations

1

“N.A.S.A: The Spirit of Apollo” by Tom Breihan,
Pitchfork
, February 18, 2009.

www.pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/12686-the-spirit-of-apollo.

Chapter Seven:
Business and Finances

1

“The Artistry Is Apparent, So Where’s the Audience?” by Stephen Holden,
The New
York Times
, February 6, 2011.

2

“Musical Survivor Hustles for a Second Chance,” by Ben Sisario,
The New York Times,
February 8,
2011.

3

“U2 Signs 12-Year Deal with Live Nation,”
Billboard
.
www.billboard.com/news/

article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003782687#/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_

id=1003782687.

4

“Live Nation’s $120 Million Bet: Breaking Down Madonna Deal,” by Peter Kafka,
Business Insider,
October 10, 2007.
http://articles.businessinsider.com/2007-10-10/

tech/30040635_1_madonna-deal-live-nation-material-girl.

5

“Bandcamp Powers Online Sales, Aims to Fill Myspace ‘Vacuum’,” by John Tozzi,
Bloomberg
, November 01, 2011.
www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-11-01/bandcamp-powers-online-sales-aims-to-fill-myspace-vacuum-.html.

Chapter Eight:
How to Make a Scene

1

Toward a Poor Theater
, by Jerzy Grotowski, Routledge, 2002, p. 255.

Chapter Nine:
Amateurs!

1

Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music
, by Mark Katz, University of California Press,
2010, p. 61.

2

What Good Are the Arts?
by John Carey, Faber & Faber, 2005, p. 34

6.

3

“The Menace of Mechanical Music,” by John Philip Sousa, originally published in
Appleton’s Magazine
vol. 8, 1906.

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