Vital
Weekly 534
JOHN DUNCAN (Book + CD by Errant Bodies Press)
The downside of reviewing is of course that within the small piece of
text an artists has to be introduced and that doesn't always justify the
artist's work. Take for instance John Duncan. Whenever he releases a new
work, in such a few lines his whole body of work has to described, but
if you are active in the world of experimental music, performance art
and installations, and this for over thirty years, it doesn't nearly justify
it. This book doesn't paint the complete picture either, but it gets close.
His early performances were quite controversial, his work with pornography
much rumored and as a musician of the more radical noise music, he was
always way ahead of his time. In this book you'll find photo's, text and
explanations of his work that will shed more light on his work, than this
simple review could do. Apart from texts by various long time close relatives
of Duncan, such as C.M. von Hauswolff, Brandon Labelle, Paul McCarthy,
Giuliana Stefani also drawings by Leif Elggren and Tom Recchion.
On the CD five pieces, two from the early days, two from the nineties
and one from the more recent years. It's interesting to see how the shortwave
sounds, Duncan's prime instrument, had developed over the years. In 'Creed',
it forms the backbone as well as a radio taped conversation between Duncan
and talkshow host Dr. Toni Grant, to the more crude 'Riot' and the refined
pieces of later date. Better microphones and means of storage, plus the
addition of field recordings make these perhaps to a lesser 'extent' noise,
certainly in 'Crucible', but it's certainly nice to hear this development,
and which no doubt will continue to develop. Duncan is still a remarkable
and still a highly controversial artist, who is one of the big shots in
the 'scene'. You could wonder why it took so long to get this book? The
only serious omission is that a complete list of work, or discography
is not included in this book. (FdW)
Paris
Transatlantic
(Feb 2007)
The Errant Bodies book is a handy document of the many facets of John
Duncan's art. Like the VOD33 box set John Duncan FIRST RECORDINGS 1978-1985,
it's pretty serious-looking - all black and white - with a lot of photos,
graphics, drawings and explanations/instructions for most of the events
that Duncan has devised, including the infamous "BLIND DATE",
which for many years sentenced him to exclusion from the Los Angeles avant-garde
scene and ruined his private life (read - or surf the Internet - if you
don't know what we're talking about). The book also features eight different
essays about Duncan. Aside from one or two misfires, these provide useful
and incisive analyses of his work in relation to its cultural and social
context (Giuliana Stefani's account of "Blind Date" is just
perfect). The accompanying CD contains five compositions dating from 1980
to 2003, which is a good refresher course even for dedicated Duncan-followers:
rediscovering the shortwaves and field recordings of CRUCIBLE (Die Stadt)
is nice enough, but listening after many years to 1984's fabulous RIOT
(AQM) made me realize that many of today's noise gods - from Merzbow to
Marhaug to Wiese - owe Duncan a bottle of wine or three. (Massimo Ricci)
Neural,
Sep 23/2007
An unstoppable attraction for extreme sounds, in line with the passions
that emerged from the international underground at the end of the Seventies,
carried John Duncan through complex paths and artistic practices (from
Los Angeles to Amsterdam, then Tokyo, then Italy, in Scrutto San Leonardo,
Tuscany). More and more contaminated territories, close to a certain kind
of performing art which, in the Viennese actionism and body art, the transgressive
experiments of Cosey Fanni Tutti (COUM Transmissions, Throbbing Gristle)
and the installations-happenings of Paul McCarthy, in California, have
their 'noble' ancestors and parallelisms. Investigations where the body
has got a pivotal role, a metaphor that spanned all of contemporary art
in the last fifty years and which, in John Duncan's case, is modulated
according to the chosen expressive media. Duncan has anticipated many
post-human tensions, in the alien symbolism of desecrated bodies ('Blind
Date'), going through proto-noise musical experiences, exploring frequencies
and sound waves ('Riot'), or field recordings ('Crucible') and the first
digital urges (in 'Seek' for the 'Mort aux Vaches' series). It's a vast
collection representing classic works and mutations, well described in
this monographic book by the many protagonists of these and those times,
between 'selected artworks', 'audio' (in the included CD), 'installations'
and 'performances'. Artistic survival strategies that, purified from the
'emotional' sides and subjected to a sensory remapping, keep their 'radical',
'aesthetic' and 'political' power intact.
(Aurelio Cianciotta)
http://www.neural.it/art/2007/09/john_duncan.phtml
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