Sound Within Sound Quotes
Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
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Kate Molleson177 ratings, 4.35 average rating, 23 reviews
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Sound Within Sound Quotes
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“And when we do listen, stop exotifying the differences.”
― Sound Within Sound: Radical Composers of the Twentieth Century
― Sound Within Sound: Radical Composers of the Twentieth Century
“Love must be a soft thing, [Walter] Smetak wrote in one of his many aphorisms. Love must arrive without causing a disturbance. 'If it is the other way around, it is just a passion, full of trouble.”
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
“[Walter] Smetak wanted his plásticas sonoras to summon a new harmony between shape, space, spirit and humanity. He dreamed of travelling beyond notions of consonance and dissonance, beyond sight and hearing and past and present to arrive at a state he called caossonance, where light becomes sound and a grand union of the senses is achieved.”
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
“[José] Maceda thought a lot about opposites, and how they seemed to him to be a Western obsession. In an essay called A Concept of Time in a Music of Southeast Asia, he references Jacques Derrida on the subject:
Good vs. evil, being vs. nothingness, presence vs. absence, truth vs. error, identity vs. difference, mind vs. matter, man vs. woman. soul vs. body, life vs. death, nature vs. culture...”
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
Good vs. evil, being vs. nothingness, presence vs. absence, truth vs. error, identity vs. difference, mind vs. matter, man vs. woman. soul vs. body, life vs. death, nature vs. culture...”
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
“In her [Éliane Radigue] essay Le temps n'a pas d'importance, she likens her music to a plant. "We never see a plant move, but it is growing continually." I ask her about that thing she does with time - her temporal sorcery, how time in her music feels both contracted (in the way it focuses on tiny details) and elongated (in the way it unfolds over many hours). "By nature," she says, "slowness is expansive yet it allows us to hear up close.”
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
“Meaning," she [Éliane Radigue] insists, "always comes from the life of the sound itself." Instead, she describes music and spirituality as train tracks, never meeting but connected by the vehicle (presumably us) which is travelling upon them.”
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
“Her persuit [Annea Lockwood] was the opposite: she wanted to see where close listening and attention to process might get her. Above all, she searched for sounds that were rich and complex enough to trigger a wake-up call. Her hunch was that if we allow ourselves to listen properly, if we start to really feel a sound in our bodies, we might also start to take more notice of the thing that made it. If that thing is a river, or a cat, or a neighbourhood, or a fellow human being, we might start to care about the source in new and deeper ways.”
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
― Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century
