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Subject: Gregory Whitehead: Out of the Dark: notes on the nobodies of radio art
From: pit@uropax.contrib.DE (Pit Schultz)
Date: 23 Jul 1997 06:38:19 +0200


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http://web.azur.fr/habitation/GWHI/dark.htm


Gregory Whitehead: Out of the Dark: notes on the nobodies of radio
art

© Gregory Whitehead. All rights reserved.

The lightning flashes through my skull; mine eye-balls
ache and ache; my whole beaten brain seems as beheaded,
and rolling on some stunning ground. Oh, oh! Yet
blindfold,yet will I walk to thee. Light though thou be,
thou leapest out of darkness; but I am darkness leaping
out of thee!
-- Captain Ahab

For most of the wireless age, artists have found themselves
vacated (or have vacated themselves) from radiophonic space -- the
history of radio art is, in this most literal sense, largely a
history of nobodies. Periodic visitations have remained isolated
occasions, provoking little cultural resonance. In the context of
radio's more entrenched and ubiquitous commercial and military
identities, such fleeting interference decays quickly.

The nobodies of radio art have been diminished even further by the
numbing absence of critical discourse. Such silence can only feed
upon itself, eventually making even the thought of radio as
cultural space seem remote, far-fetched, improbable. By
consequence, when radio has appeared under the name of art, it has
most often under the degraded guise of industrial artifact, with
its commercialized cacophony providing one sound source among
others. In this reduced state, radio is no longer an autonomous
public space, but merely an acoustic readymade to be
recontextualized, switched on and played.

Alternately, the investigation of radio has disappeared into the
investigation of sound, the wireless body stripped and redressed
to provide a broadcast identity for the nebulous permutations of
diverse ars acoustica . In this variation, radio art is defined as
simply whatever any artist from any medium happens to represent,
acoustically, on air.

Radio's gradual drift into such a flatly pedestrian state of mind
contrasts sharply with the high flying and exuberant aspirations
first triggered by Marconi's twitching finger: promises of
communication with alien beings, the establishment of a universal
language, instantaneous travel through collapsing space and the
achievement of a lasting global peace. "It would be almost like
dreamland and ghostland, not the ghostland cultivated by a heated
imagination, but a real communication from a distance based on
true physical laws." However breathless in formulation, this
author's coupling of "dreamland and ghostland" roots radio in a
vibrant double infinity, the dreamland infinity of the human
nervous system oscillating with (and against) the vast ghostland
of deep space.

If the dreamland/ghostland is the natural habitat for the wireless
imagination, then the material of radio art is not just sound.
Radio happens in sound, but sound is not really what matters about
radio. What does matter is the bisected heart of the infinite
dreamland/ ghostland, a heart that beats through a series of
highly pulsed and fricative oppositions: the radio signal as
intimate but untouchable, sensually charged but technically
remote, reaching deep inside but from way out there, seductive in
its invitation but possibly lethal in its effects. Shaping the
play of these frictions, the radio artist must then enact a kind
of sacrificial auto-electrocution, performed in order to go
straight out of one mind and (who's there?) then diffuse, in
search of a place to settle. Mostly, this involves staging an
intricate game of position, a game that unfolds among far-flung
bodies, for the most part unknown to each other.

I
Radio art does have something of a prehistory in the variously
electrified adventures recorded in nineteenth century literature,
one conspicuous example provided by Poe's M. Valdemar: a
mesmerized Recording Angel. Less obviously, why not rewind
Melville's narrative of the Nantucket whaling vessel Pequod as an
early journey into charged ghostland air? However improbable such
a reading may appear at first glance, it is hard to resist
including Moby Dick within such a discussion because Ahab so
persuasively prefigures at least one persona for the twisted,
schizoid nature of wireless telegraphy. Mad Captain Ahab, himself
split from the head down by a "rod-like mark, lividly whitish",
resembling, in Ishmael's awe-struck description, "that
perpendicular seam sometimes made in the straight, lofty trunk of
a great tree, when the upper lightning tearingly darts down it,
leaving the tree still greenly alive, but branded." Indeed, Ahab's
split body is so unseemly to Ishmael's narrative eye that he
almost fails to notice "the barbaric white leg" which for the
duration of the voyage will telegraph, through coded tappings
across the wooden quarterdeck, the slow unwinding of the captain's
mind.

Binding Melville's story to its foregone conclusion and Pequod's
crew to his doomed hunt for the White Whale, Ahab's brand haunts
Moby Dick. The most stunning demonstration of its unearthly spell
occurs late in Pequod's ill-fated voyage, when the ship is
illuminated by an eerie outburst of corposants in the midst of a
violent squall. Her three masts "silently burning in that
sulfurous air, like three gigantic wax tapers before an altar",
the Pequod falls dead silent, her crew transfixed by the spectacle
of "God's burning finger" . Overruling Starbuck's pleas for mercy,
Ahab sets the authority of his own electrocuted body against the
lightning that cuts its wild course through the moral fibre of his
crew, proclaiming "Oh, thou clear spirit, of thy fire thou madest
me, and like a true child of fire, I breathe it back to thee."

When Ahab's harpoon, fired by his own hand to spear the scarred
blubber of Moby Dick, is momentarily transformed into a lightning
rod, the crew panics, pushed by the uncanny fireworks display to
the brink of mutiny. Without missing a step, Ahab snatches the
torched harpoon, waves it among the terrified whalers and
pronounces his single most piercing ultimatum:

"'All your oaths to hunt the White Whale are as binding as mine;
and by heart, soul, and body, lungs and life, old Ahab is bound.
And that you may know to what tune this heart beats; look ye here;
thus I blow out the last fear!' And with one blast of his breath
he extinguished the flame."

Inflicted by some nameless confrontation with nature, Ahab's
brand, doubled by the steel transmitter of his inflamed harpoon,
names the Pequod's destiny. The old navel of the Pequod (the gold
doubloon, nailed to the mainmast as a reward for the first seaman
to lay eyes on the White Whale) is displaced by the flare of
Ahab's wireless signature or, perhaps closer to the mark, by his
call sign. So many agitated and authoritarian wands wagging about
must invite catastrophe, and Pequod herself is soon punctured by
Moby's battering brow. Fittingly enough, Ishmael saves himself by
seizing upon a floating book jacket: the coffin crafted by
Queequeg to store his own dead body-book, inscribed with the
intricate cosmogony of his native tribe by a needle driven
recording device: the tattoo.

Though killed by a whale in a novel that predates the first
transatlantic transmission by almost exactly half a century, Ahab
still stands as one chilling prototype for the wireless persona:
suspended between life and death, between redemptive dissemination
and lethal degeneracy, what is it made of and what does it want?
With its scorched skin, aching eyeballs, prosthetic limbs,
shocking tail, brain on fire and blasted breath, should we follow
to eternity, or stage a mutiny, cut the mindless thing off, tune
it out? Is the twitching finger of the telegraph an invitation to
electromagnetic pleasure or is it pulling a trigger, pushing a
button?

The radiobody cannot give a straight answer, but challenges the
audience to cross and recross the obscure boundaries that separate
radio dreamland from radio ghostland, living from dead, utopia
from oblivion. Just beneath the promise of a lightning connection
to a world of dreamy invisible things lurks a darker potential for
spotlessly violent electrocution, for going up in smoke, or going
down with the ship. Begin in a radio dreamland, end in a radio
war.

II
Incorporating the promise of universal communication bound
together with the more immediate prospect of irreversible decay,
the radiobody (still in pieces, still in the making) is a
composite of opposites: speaking to everyone abstractly and no one
in particular; ubiquitous, but fading without a trace; forever
crossing boundaries but with uncertain destination; capable of the
most intimate communion and the most sudden destruction. Radio is
a medium voiced by multiple personalities, perfect for pillow
talk, useful as an anti-depressant, but also deployable as guiding
beam for missile systems. Over the course of the twentieth
century, the radio ghostland has come very fully into its own. No
surprise, then, that the most notable artist proposals for radio
should air on frequencies populated by so many zombie bodies,
limbo dancing, inside out.

1.
In 1921, Velimir Khlebnikov's Futurist brand of brain fever
produced a proposal for radio as "the spiritual sun of the
country", built to sing the strange unearthly songs of "lightning
birds" . Pushing buttons at master controls, the Great Sorcerer of
Radio Khlebnikov would have the power and means to mesmerize the
minds of the entire nation, both healing the sick via long
distance hypnotic suggestion and increasing labor productivity
through the seasonal transmission of prescribed notes, "for it is
a known fact that certain notes like 'la' and 'ti' are able to
increase muscle capacity". Depending on the ornithographic
predispositions of the wizard-in-the-main-station, human bodies
might well be recast as passive receptacles for bird droppings.

Once radiowaves have fused with the nation's mental life, the
slightest interruption of broadcast projection would provoke "a
mental blackout over the entire country, a temporary loss of
consciousness". Given the constant threat of black-out, massive
brain damage and collective death, the critical feeders in the
main aviary of the Great Sorcerer must be protected, insulated,
fortified; fantastic radio projections require protective signage
equal to their high security voltage, and are represented in
Khlebnikov's vision by the universal Danger icon of skull and
crossbones. Though Futurist artist-engineers would not be
permitted the opportunity to orchestrate the polyphony of the
Russian revolution, the design of Radio Khlebnikov's control
station anticipates the telecommunications bunkers that would
monitor and control the next World War, as the intermingled
modulation of birdlike radiowaves with the rattle of human bones
certainly provides the wireless imagination with another chilling
call sign. Indeed, one of the most accomplished Radio Sorcerers
(and bone producers) of all time would spend the last days of his
own spellbinding dissemination in just such a "stronghold of
steel", searching frantically for the magical "la" or "ti" that
might restore muscle power to the atrophied protoplasm of the
Thousand Year Reich.

2.
A dozen years later, F. T. Marinetti and Pino Masnata undoubtedly
woke up with grave headaches after building the foundation of La
Radia into their piles of assorted corpses : the corpse of
theater, "because radio killed a theater already defeated by sound
cinema"; the corpse of cinema, deceased from a variety of
"agonizing" wounds, including "reflected illumination inferior to
the self-illumination of radio-television"; the corpse of the
book, "strangled, suffocated, fossilized"; and the corpse of the
The Public, "always retrograde." La Radia also mounts an explicit
bombing raid on Marinetti's own Variety Theatre, singled out for
its crippling dependence on the physical constraints of the
earthbound performing body. There is also the sinister (though
rarely cited) threat of future corpse production, in "warning the
Semites to identify themselves with their different countries if
they don't wish to disappear."

Amidst the general carnage, who is left to animate the La Radia ?
In contrast to Khlebnikov's Grand Sorcerer, whose mission is to
conjure up enchanting sensations for airborne delivery to
enthralled masses, the Marinetti/Masnata radiasta is the engineer
of pure emanation, charged with the "detection, amplification and
transfiguration of vibrations emitted from dead and living
beings". Disdaining the illusionist fantasies of lightning birds
and other synaesthetic projections, the task of the radiasta is
nothing less than the realization of an entirely new
electromagnetic being, a "pure organism of radiophonic
sensations". In sum, the artist-engineer radiasta represents the
personification of a longstanding Futurist aspiration, underscored
by Marinetti/Masnata in La Radia as "the overcoming of death with
a metallization of the body".

3.
In the post-war period, the feverish condition of the ghosted
radiobody explodes through Antonin Artaud's blistering To Have
Done With the Judgement of God. Artaud's urgent address to The
People of France, which at some moments seems almost to consume
him, was canceled at the last minute by the director of French
national radio, who solemnly intoned the usual litany of
objections: obscenity, sacrilege and anti-Americanism. After
listening to a tape of the broadcast, the sense of a deeper fear
hangs in the air, the fear of just what might happen should the
unprepared public be exposured to such an enraged and afflicted
persona. The threatening power of this address resides not only in
its pure acoustic projection of Artaud's psychic condition, but in
his instinctive grasp of radiophonic space, the space of the two
infinities. Modulating among the diverse vocal/linguistic
frequencies of news report (bulletin: sperm donation a condition
of enrollment in American public schools), hallucination,
incantation, talk show (his furious self-interview), glossolallic
ejaculation, death rattle and political tirade, Artaud's
performance mirrors the perpetually slipped and mutating demi-dead
dreamland/ghostland of radio itself. Dispersed, self-cancelled,
splintered, intoxicated, unprecedented and out of its mind, the
hybrid, polyphonous body of To Have Done With the Judgement of God
is tailor made for post-war air.

III
With Artaud in mind, let us now return for a moment to the deck of
the Pequod on the third and final day of Ahab's quest. Locked into
Moby Dick's (yes, and Moby Dick's) "infallible wake" and
addressing nobody in particular, Ahab casts out yet another
remarkable series of ruminations, first professing that his body
is a hot medium: "Ahab never thinks; he only feels, feels; that's
tingling enough for mortal man! (...) Thinking is, or ought to be,
a coolness and a calmness; and our poor hearts throb, and our poor
brains beat too much for that."

Ahab next tunes his tingling to the invisible wind, which has
consistently interfered with the wail of his obsession. At once
praised and despised, the wind stands for everything Ahab cannot
get his hands on: "Would now the wind but had a body; but all the
things that most exasperate and outrage mortal man, all these
things are bodiless, but only bodiless as objects, not as agents.
There's a most special, a most cunning, oh a most malicious
difference!" Within a matter of hours, Ahab is finally yanked to
his death "voicelessly as Turkish mutes bowstring their victim" by
the line of his own harpoon.

In the concluding section of To Have Done With the Judgement of
God, Artaud announces and puts on display his Last Will and
Testament, fresh from the autopsy table of the production studio
at Radiodiffusion FranÁaise. Here at last is a theatrical bequest
designed to explore, explode and exploit that most special,
cunning and malicious difference that throbs between object and
agency - a body without organs. For Artaud, only such a body could
be free from the maddening god-itch, free from the plague of human
desires and from "microbial noxiousness", free to "dance inside
out", delirious but also purified, dead to the world but living on
air. Like Ahab, Artaud had ample experience of lightning flashed
through his skull, though conducted by means rather more
earthbound than God's burning finger. But through the exasperated
and outraged agency of his radiophony, he could at last find
relief from the "infinitesimal inside" of his tortured flesh.
Staged within this most charged scenario, technically primitive
but conceptually so electric, Artaud's shocked and shocking body
could at last find its real place.

Evidently, inhabiting such an infallible wake is not without
concurrent risk. As Artaud himself had already written a few
months before: "The magic of electric shock drains a death rattle,
it plunges the shocked one into that death rattle with which one
leaves life." Enter the territory of Bardo, a Tibetan concept
designating the limbo region between living and dead but for
Artaud also recalling the limbo region of electroshock, the
suspended sentence of Artaud's own corporeal nightmare. For
Artaud, it was this most special, cunning and malicious difference
that marked the destiny for a body without organs, rolling on some
stunning ground: "The world, but its no longer me, and what do you
care, says Bardo, it's me".

IV
Yes, the circuit from Ahab to Artaud is a circuit powered by
magnetic death drives and the sick hunger for signal omniscience -
but so beats the pulse of twentieth century broadcast. The
alternative potential for casting conceptual, linguistic and
acoustic commotion into an entirely fresh radiophonic dreamland
has hardly been tapped.

Out of the dark: Voices in every conceivable incarnation, heating
up the airwaves, interrupting the flow of everyday informations,
breaking wind and chilling out, releasing a powerful resuscitation
of the playful, libidinal and liberating radiodream from the danse
macabre of the ghostland boneyard.

A revitalized practice of radio art languishes in cultural limbo
because today's wireless imagination applies itself exclusively -
fervently! - to questions of intensified commodity circulation and
precision weapons systems. So far, all "real" radio really has to
show for itself is a ceaseless cacophony of agitated sales
pitches, pop song patter and several mountainous piles of corpses.
If the idea of radiophony as the autonomous, electrified play of
bodies unknown to each other (the unabashed aspiration of radio
art) sounds at times like it has been irretrievably lost, it is
most likely because the air has already become too thick with the
buzz of commerce and war, too overrun by radar beams, burning
harpoons, wagging fingers, body brands and traffic reports to
think of anything else. "Light though thou be, thou leapest out of
darkness; but I am darkness leaping out of thee!"

(published with permission)