Music as Spectral Infrastructure: Day One
Laura Grace Ford, Untitled Collage, 2016, digital image courtesy of Laura Grace Ford
Day one as part of the two-day program Music as Spectral Infrastructure, part of Le Guess Who? 2021, reflects on the present and historical state of electronic music, looking at how it registers traces and resistances to the corporate and statist drives while structuring collective musical and sonic desire. View the program of day two (Sunday) here.
(Update 12 November 2021: because of new Covid-19 restrictions, unfortunately, the evening program is partially moved to the afternoon and partly cancelled, Check out the full update here).
PROGRAM DAY ONE
14.00–18.00 hrs
14.00–14.15 hrs
Introduction
Louis Moreno (member of freethought and lecturer in the Department of Visual Cultures, Goldsmiths, University of London, London)
14.15–15.30 hrs
India Tapes (1969–1972)
Paul Purgas (artist and musician)
Presentation and conversation with music
The opening session explores the life and afterlife of early experiments in electronic music produced at the National Institute of Design in the city of Ahmedabad, Western India in the 1960s and 1970s. The presentation and conversation revolves around Paul Purgas’s archival research into India’s first electronic music studio and how we can think of the studio as a form of spectral infrastructure.
15.30–17.00 hrs
Music for Airports, Playlists, and Other Rent-Seeking Platforms
Paul Rekret (researcher and teacher) and Ollie Zhang (writer, editor, curator and musician)
Presentations and conversation with music excerpts
This session discusses the consumption and production of electronic music today, and how music has become both an ecological system and a new personalized frontier for digital capital.
Paul Rekret and Ollie Zhang consider the financial and digital infrastructures that use music as a means to curate and segment collective forms of sonic desire. What kind of spectral infrastructure can resist these systems?
—
17.00–17.15 hrs
Break
—
17.15–18.00 hrs
Radical Spectrality: Solstice 93
Laura Grace Ford
Listening session for a new sound work by Grace Ford, Solstice 93
A new sound work by Laura Grace Ford, articulating what Grace Ford calls “social forms of radical spectrality,” which haunts and resists the spatial apparatuses of urban gentrification and policing.
ENTRY/TICKETS
The entire program can be attended with a Le Guess Who? 2021 Festival wristband.
Alternatively, you can purchase tickets for the program via BAK (here or via button above).
Tickets are €7.50 for a regular ticket, and €5 for students. There are also solidarity tickets available, providing free entry for those who otherwise could not attend.
Would you like to attend all or several parts of the program? Please click the “Continue shopping” button in the check-out screen, to add more tickets to your basket before finishing your order.
Livestream
The program is also livestreamed via BAK’s website and Facebook page.
Coronatoegangsbewijs
Please note that it is required to show a “Coronatoegangsbewijs” (Corona entry pass) combined with a valid ID card at the door. More information here on the website of the Dutch Government. Please also review our other Covid-19 guidelines here.