1- Ghostbusting: Reframing Modular Synthesis’ Ghosts of Technoscientific Past with Suzanne Ciani - Allison Sokil, University of Toronto
Quand:
9:00 AM, Dimanche 26 Mai 2019
(2 heures)
Pauses:
Pause café 11:00 AM à 11:30 AM (30 minutes)
Où:
Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) -
DS-1545
Comment:
The historiography of electronic music remains primarily framed by the “ghosts
of technoscientific projects past” (Rodgers 2012, 475): discourses situated
around men, machines, and the military. From the earliest discussions of noise by
twentieth-century Futurists to contemporary narratives outlining the rise of commercial
synthesizers, the presence, or “ghosts,” of power, masculinity, and war
continue to preside over the (re)telling of the history of electronic music
instruments and synthesis (Pinch and Trocco 2002; Rodgers 2010, 2012; Taylor
and Grajeda 2012). Ethnomusicologists often engage in bringing these ghosts and
spectres of power into focus, most frequently in discussions of privilege and
race in processes of music-making and sound scholarship (Jackson 2006, 282;
Radano and Bohlman 2000, 1). In this paper, I will expand on this exegetical
frame through an exploration of an alternate narration of the history of
commercial synthesizers through the work of composer, sound designer, and Buchla
innovator and performer, Suzanne Ciani. Presenting Ciani as a “ghost-buster” of
sorts, a figure who materializes and illuminates the complexities of power present
in the widely accessible histories of commercial synthesizers, this paper presents
a reassessment of the development of modular synthesis and performance through
a critical perspective addressing intersecting issues of gender, race, and
affect in electronic music production’s past and present.