Notes from the underground: Damon Krukowski on Cornelius Cardew.
Krukowski, Damon
CORNELIUS CARDEW: A READER, BY CORNELIUS CARDEW ET AL. EDITED BY
EDWIN PREVOST. HARLOW, UK. COPULA, 2006. 400 PAGES. $48.
SOME GESTURES are so large, they cast the rest of a career into
shadow. Such is the case with English composer Cornelius Cardew, whose
rather spectacular conversion to a Maoist-influenced branch of Marxism
in the early 1970s led him to denounce both his avant-garde mentors and
his own previous compositions. The explosive title of his 1974 essay,
"Stockhausen Serves Imperialism," has reached further than the
text itself and, sadly, further than Cardew's music.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
What has been eclipsed is Cardew's restless experimentation
with serialism, Cagean chance, graphic notation, and various forms of
improvisation. His political radicalization was just the latest sharp
turn in his thinking--and it was his last; in 1981, at age forty-five,
he was killed by a hit-and-run driver. It is these philosophical
transformations, combined with the indeterminate nature of much of his
music, that have made it difficult for those wishing to look beyond
Cardew's politics to piece together a coherent idea of his work.
The publication of Cardew's collected writings, Cornelius
Cardew: A Reader, would seem to contribute to this fractured image of
the artist--he argues with himself endlessly, both within and between
the essays, and, toward the end of this chronologically arranged volume,
renounces his compositions almost as soon as he completes them. However,
what emerges from these texts is a thread running through all his music,
a concern that is best revealed in his essays because it is essentially
a literary one: Why write music? What the Reader makes clear is that the
mechanics and ethics of notation were paramount to Cardew, from his
earliest work to his last.
Indeed, reading Cardew might be the truest way to experience his
music. For Cardew, notation posed problems directly related to
Wittgenstein's investigations of language. "Notation and
composition determine each other," he writes in a 1961 article
first published in Tempo magazine. This logic fueled Cardew's five
years' labor on what might be considered his masterpiece, Treatise
(1963-67). Across 193 pages--of which any number of pages can be
performed as a complete score--Cardew drew two empty staves of music.
Above them, a central line traces a nearly continuous path through the
score; around that line, Cardew placed a variety of abstract figures
drawn with a compass and a ruler (he was also a graphic designer),
together with a few numbers. There are no other instructions.
So what does Treatise sound like? That would seem to be entirely up
to the performer. However, in a fascinating set of working notes to the
piece (Treatise Handbook, 1971), Cardew specifies, "The sound
should be a picture of the score, not vice versa." This inversion
of the usual relationship between the language of a score and the music
it represents reaches beyond Wittgensteinian complication toward a kind
of conceptual music: Notation and composition not only determine each
other in Treatise, they are one and the same. Cardew elaborates:
"The notation is more important than the sound. Not the exactitude
and success with which a notation notates a sound; but the musicalness
of the notation in its notating." This knotty text (typical of
Cardew's philosophical pirouettes) pulls cleanly into a logical
line: The notation of Treatise is itself a form of music--just not a
music that need be heard, necessarily. "Sounds-ideas," writes
Cardew elsewhere; "reading Treatise is a twilight experience where
the two cannot be clearly distinguished."
It is this merging of sound and idea that is Cardew's artistic
legacy; it is also why it is a challenge to understand his work through
performances of his music alone. Recordings often depend so heavily on
the given musician(s) that it is difficult to know which ideas, if any,
are from Cardew himself. The Cardew Reader, on the other hand, provides
a direct encounter with Cardew's ideas--and therefore with his
sounds.
In the years following Treatise, Cardew explored, with two
ensembles, the possibilities of merging sound and idea. He joined the
free improvisation group AMM in 1966, in which he explored completely
unnotated music. And in 1969 Cardew cofounded the Scratch Orchestra, a
large, open-ended group dedicated to collective composition--a mix of
trained and untrained musicians performing a range of activities they
scripted for themselves. Both experiments further blurred the line
between thought and action, ideas and sounds, composition and music.
What Cardew writes about his experience with AMM could equally apply to
the Scratch Orchestra: "When you play [this] music, you are the
music."
While AMM "operat[ed] without any formal system or
limitation," as Cardew described it, the Scratch Orchestra was the
most tortured and deliberative of collectives, complete with a draft
constitution (included in the Reader), "discontent meetings,"
and slogans. It was in an ideological group within the orchestra that
Cardew began studying Marxist theory, perhaps to better understand these
twin experiments with collective action. Ultimately, Cardew left both
groups and abandoned his graphic compositions together with the rest of
"the bourgeois musical avant garde" in order to look for ways
his music might more directly serve his political goals--he even formed
a kind of rock band to perform at demonstrations.
It is ironic that in his Maoist period Cardew recorded the music
with which it is easiest to associate him as an individual musician
rather than as a member of a collective--an album of "socialist
piano music" based on revolutionary and workers' songs. These
works are not sounds-ideas, however; or rather, there is only one idea
that is meant to emerge from them. When Cardew turned his back on the
avant-garde, he began annotating his music: He went so far as to request
that banners with Maoist slogans hang over the heads of the Scratch
Orchestra, as the group performed one of his works at the Albert Hall in
London. Only a writer could think those banners would make a difference.
A MUSICIAN AND WRITER, DAMON KRUKOWSKI IS THE AUTHOR OF THE MEMORY
THEATER BURNED (TURTLE POINT PRESS, 2004).