All the Sounds that Were Ever Excluded – A Selection from Eastman
Thom Donovan and Julius Eastman
September 22, 2019
Elecment Series #3
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[Stay On It]
The wear of the voice reaching
After heaven
Mackey called it
Falsetto of this bright bird song
From bells we make a beyond
We make the sky glow
With patterns of all we are
These rooftops release
The view from its pollution
The city from its expropriation
Give the bodies back
This is the view
From an impossible
Disco in the air
The sustained notes of erstwhile
Morning
Mourning no more
The repetition in domination
So we are the insistent redress
Of dance and the notes
Are in a dance
And the
Words are in a dance
And
So we are
So we whistled
So we whistled our way
Into paradise
Check your body
At the door
Angel of control
No more
Angel of death
No more
So what we whistled was what
We were
Was birdsong prefigured by morning
Or morning by birdsong?
When you sang I couldn’t tell
I couldn’t tell the voice from your instrument
Your instrument from your personhood
Seizing its sudden freedom
Immediately among the eyebeams
And otherworldly force of others
Erupting in this world
Immanent to xylophone
To that other whistling within
The seepage of balloons
When the afterparty’s over
That’s where I want to be
With a hangover in the bright sun with you
Somber as hell but loving you
Hungry and tired and cold
Thinking how are we going to get home
———————————————————————————–
[440]
New fashioned ears beyond countable
Wavelengths sound like sirens across the bay
Sound like nothing except themselves
Some music of the spheres not being rational
Because they hum for a real long time
Like this was 2001
Not like Hal but like a search engine in 2001
Or maybe the howl played backward like one were trying to mime hell
Or a Buchla broke down and abandoned in the studio
Just left there to chirp for all eternity, to bleep
Plucking is the only respite from prepared bark
Prepared howl, prepared cacophony
“Overtone” rhymes with “overthrown” obviously
There is fucking with the octave and fucking with the recording of the overtone
There is fucking with the overtone’s untranscribeability necessitating a score
———————————————————————————–
[Macle]
Remain in the hole, the macula
There is no way to put a scream into a song, or is there?
There is no way to put a scream into a poem
Make this the agora or commons of all the sounds that were ever excluded
Which would have to include your best animal imitations
Best bark, best snort, best chirp, best squawk, best cat in heat
Which would also include best cackle, best doowop, best orgasm, best spiritual, best field holler, best effects pedal
Car key jingle, water glass tinkle, saw wave, sine wave, lament, canticle, radio…
Call these “actions”
———————————————————————————–
[Eight Songs for a Mad King]
dada my key my
dear strange dancing fling
meh meh let me
try and some you
*
dear lack tell and
oh be strangling greying
snakes I be hung
gone and low yellow
*
green like a tape
and bones I think
it is thought Adam
I being you
*
what it was that
you sing
on my
knee glory dam
Adam sweet
Thames fa ah
fa heed
God God
*
by my people
gather me from
my people
they are within
we are modern
unto what garden
a new sound
*
sweet Thames
no more soft
I am weary
of this faint
I am the ah
when is the
queen
*
have they chained
you my darling in
a stage war
do they stab you
strike you
astound
you and your
whole world?
*
on my
ride like
a starlet’s
mouth
*
I hate white lies
let it be a black lie
a landlord sin sin
lack eyes
*
my writs
are coughs
ever I
your kind
have cut
*
on my breast a star
the king is dead
he will die
———————————————————————————–
[If You’re So Smart, Why Aren’t You Rich?]
Ascending in so much silence
This hiss of taps
Or sound sucked out
Doubling your debt
Crying while whistling
Then everything deflates
The notes of a soggy day
Defeated by bell
By distant brass
Blamed in this present
Descending the comedy of everyday
Noise a commons
I can imagine everything that can go wrong
A dialogue of depressives
Swatting at flies
Having farted
What a relief
Then the doorbell rings
Broken doorbell of our dreams
It all rises
The world rises
To fall like stocks
Like stockings
Like pants
Without suspenders
In this sad dumb joke
Charlie Brown phone voice
Tirade symphony
Insistently
Sneaking in a phasing violin
Ding-donging
Hearing little else but obstruction
Obstreperousness
Funny falling awake
The tiniest violin
Oblivion
Plays for you
Like your mom said
Before the band tuned up
During intermission
Floated in like a giant
A giant balloon and its shadow
With the air let out
Ungainly playthings
Of these real scales
Do me wrong
We ascend when we should descend
Downlift
Got the spirit
Like Ayler broke down
Holy ghosts break wind
At the crossroads
———————————————————————————–
[Creation]
It is early and the devils are tuning up
It is early and yet we are singing
What this sound wave has to say
Being thronged and ohmed and ummed
Being a prepared piano for an action
In a bewildering and haunting echo
Of nature being a haunted house
Where to create is not to reproduce
That’s why we laugh and stick
Things up our ass lol
“Show us the pure tit”
Fucking up the Beach Boys acid phase
Fucking up Dylan’s harmonica
“I’ve found the pure tit”
“I’ve found it right here in Cologne”
“I think it’s perfectly comfortable”
Running your hand across an inflated balloon
Is the most unnatural (i.e., queerest) sound I’ve ever heard
“He did the funky chicken”
“He didn’t fuck the chicken”
Like Godz in heat, Caged heat, amplify a wrapper—
Overhear this creation
Looking forward to Dolmen Music
Whatisthismusicobscuredbyvoicewhatisthisvoiceobscuredbymusic?
What does J.E. know that the Beach Boys don’t?
This interview with chickens
I first thought them devils
Over hella flutes and light gong
The voices are getting closer
And we almost recognize their song
But what is being created?
Triangle, piano, lunge
“We’ve been rehearsing this scene for a very long time”
“I think it’s time we showed the full spectrum”
This is the full spectrum (of what?)
Gesture of that harmonica, gesture of that accordion
“I’ve found the pure tit”
“Where did you find it?”
“Right here in Cologne”
“It’s hard to believe”
“Pure tits aren’t usually found in Germany”
Latex spread this difference
Tinkles, twinkles, voices, instantly, this child
“They had 5 children”
“They had 4 animals too”
Unnatural (i.e., queer) as a cat in heat (socially unreproduced)
Creation is tearing
It is wearing
It is daring
It is faring
It is hurrying
It is hearing
“You can’t define”
———————————————————————————–
[Statement]
Attention to the music of Julius Eastman has had a major resurgence (one might more accurately say resurrection) since I started writing these poems roughly three years ago. Contributing to this resurgence have been countless performances of his works internationally in spaces for visual art, music, and contemporary dance, as well as an increasing amount of scholarship devoted to the composer. When I turned to Eastman, it was largely on account of my longtime interest in his milieus, principally that of the University of Buffalo and Upstate New York in the late 60s and early 70s, and of Manhattan’s Downtown and Disco scenes in the late 70s and 80s. Many poems from the larger manuscript of “Eastman” are engaged with these milieus and the intricate and intense social histories which they embody. Likewise, as with many of the poems I have written after artists and art works over the years, “Eastman” has offered me an opportunity to explore aesthetic practices other than my own and develop new (to myself) techniques for writing. For instance, a simple procedure that guides many of the poems here is to only write while listening to Eastman’s recorded music, a procedure I developed in the spirit of the “structured improvisations” of the composer’s collaborator, Arthur Russell. Yet another procedure which has guided the project is that of transcribing words and sounds. In the case of the former, I have a tendency to mishear (sung) language, which leads to some interesting transliterative effects, but which may also take-up what Fred Moten calls the “non-reduction of phonic substance,” a concept that has been generative both for my writing and teaching practices for over a decade. As the project deepens, and I listen more deeply—not just to Eastman’s works in themselves, but for their socio-political contexts and occasions—the richer and more nuanced I feel my relationship with the music becomes. Given Eastman’s penchant for allegory, and for a sort of virtuosic tricksterism, such a richness would seem inexhaustible despite the tragic dearth of his archive (many of his works were never recorded or recorded badly, and many of his scores were lost in a housing eviction in the late 80s, not long before his death at 49). This project is also indebted to the collective efforts of many scholars and thinkers who have made Eastman’s archive possible, not least of all Renée Levine Packer and Mary Jane Leach whose groundbreaking anthology, Gay Guerrilla, provides an invaluable resource for understanding Eastman’s biography and work. The music library at SUNY-Buffalo was kind enough to grant me access to otherwise unavailable archival recordings of Eastman performances, which accounts for the poems “Macle” and “440.” Thank you in particular to John Bewley, Associate Librarian and Archivist at the library.
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Raised in Ithaca, NY, Julius Eastman (October 27, 1940-May 28, 1990) was a composer, instrumentalist, performer, and singer. As a professor at the University at Buffalo in the late 60s and early 70s, he worked with the S.E.M. Ensemble and Creative Associates under Lukas Foss and Morton Feldman. Upon moving to New York City in the mid-70s, he collaborated extensively with many of those considered vital to the Downtown music scene, including famously Meredith Monk and Arthur Russell. His composition Stay on It (1973), while often attributed to Minimalism, anticipates House and Techno music in its emphasis on micro-rhythmic variation, as well as through its synthesis of numerous divergent musical genres, including European classical, pop, and jazz. By foregrounding his identity as Gay and Black through the titling of his compositions, formal aspects of his compositions, and his dispositions as a performer, he challenged the dominant minimalist and post-Cageian sensibilities of his era, injecting them with post-Stonewall, post-Black Power urgencies. Until the release of his collection Unjust Malaise with New World Records in 2005, and the subsequent championing of his music by composer-scholars Jace Clayton, Mary Jane Leach, George E. Lewis, and Renée Levine Packer, Eastman was virtually forgotten by music history and a broader culture.
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Thom Donovan is the author of numerous books, including Withdrawn (Compline, 2017), The Hole (Displaced Press, 2012) and Withdrawn: a Discourse (Shifter, 2016). He co-edits and publishes ON Contemporary Practice. He is also the editor of Occupy Poetics (Essay Press, 2015); To Look At The Sea Is To Become What One Is: an Etel Adnan Reader (with Brandon Shimoda; Nightboat Books, 2014), Supple Science: a Robert Kocik Primer (with Michael Cross; ON Contemporary Practice, 2013), and Wild Horses Of Fire. His current projects include a book of poems and other writings based upon the compositions of Julius Eastman, a book of critical essays regarding poetics, political practice, and the occult, and an ongoing “ante-memoir” entitled Left Melancholy.
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With thanks to Centre for Contemporary Arts: Glasgow for permissions to embed the Julius Eastman Creative Associates Tour (Part 1) 1974 video.