-
When I first started, people
were always like,
-
"Oh man, you use so much sound,
so much music, isn't it a bit vulgar?"
-
And I'm like, yeah, yeah! [LAUGHS]
-
I like the vulgarity of it.
-
That's the point.
[LAUGHS]
-
The new comes into being via
this powerful way of vulgarity.
-
So I don't have a problem with vulgarity.
-
["The Unfinished Conversation" (2012)]
-
--Okay, so this is an important point.
-
--I think it's either that guy or that guy,
-
--one of them has a GoPro.
-
--Or just to say that his picture
might be completely rubbish,
-
--That's pretty close to where you were just then.
-
I'm interested also in just
the conversation between noise--
-
not just music, but noise.
-
The ways in which
-
noise
-
suggests
-
direction for images.
-
One of the things that I
learned very early on is that
-
there are sonic ways of knowing the world,
-
which are as important
as all the other ways.
-
As a young Black kid,
growing up in this country,
-
you'd go to one of these
nightclubs where they'll be playing
-
let's say, dub.
-
And over the course of two hours,
-
there would be you and a group of people,
-
and you will literally discover
each other in that music.
-
The music would license
these recognitions
-
that are not speech.
-
They're not about what you
say to each other at all.
-
But I'm also really
interested in the redemptive
-
possibilities that music offers.
-
["The Unfinished Conversation" (2012)]
-
My first or second year of university,
-
I'm standing by a window,
not really feeling great,
-
listening to BBC Radio 3,
-
and suddenly this music comes on
-
and it literally reconfigures my world.
-
It's by an Estonian
composer called Arvo Pärt.
-
["The Nine Muses" (2010)]
-
The music said,
-
"You are in this space,"
-
"and it is possible to occupy this space differently,"
-
"and I'm going to tell you how."
-
And it did.
[LAUGHS]
-
In the course of 16 minutes,
-
a new music composition
changed how I saw time,
-
and by implication, myself in it.
-
So I have a
-
profound
-
investment
-
in the sonic,
-
which comes across in the work.
-
But I was part of a group
that saw itself as a,
-
as a sort of audio, acoustic
experimental outfit.
-
I used a lot of music because
I liked the knowledges
-
they implied,
-
and I wanted them to give me
something that I can use to
-
talk to a narrative or
stories or histories.
-
What changes over the years
is the range, or the stuff.
-
So, initially "musique concrète."
-
["Mnemosyne" (2010)]
-
And then classical
pieces, operatic pieces.
-
["Tropikos" (2016)]
-
And now more and more folk forms.
-
["Auto da fé" (2016)]
-
The forms themselves and
the range of uses change.
-
But the investment in the
sonic is as long lasting
-
as the investment in images.
-
That's not going to change.