Showing posts with label Peter Strickland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Strickland. Show all posts

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Berberian Sound Studio


WARNING: I give away a fair few plot details here - although as it's not a particularly narrative-driven film, it probably doesn't matter too much.

Peter Strickland’s film Berberian Sound Studio begins with a scene in which the protagonist, Gilderoy, a small, neat and quietly self-contained man (played with great subtlety by Toby Jones) walks along an anonymous, institutional corridor. It could be the entryway into a hospital, council offices or the exit from a small airport. In fact it leads to the sound booths of the dingy Italian film studios in which he will be incarcerated for the foreseeable future. The melancholic, descending scale on the soundtrack, its lonely, echoing notes plucked on an autoharp and drawing on the Broadcast song I Found the F from their Tender Buttons LP (Broadcast provide much of the music for the film) sets the mood of isolation and dislocation which will predominate throughout. Then, Julian House’s extraordinary title sequence explodes upon our senses, letting us know the kind of film whose post-production Gilderoy has stumbled into. Its roughly outlined, silhouetted images imprinted upon a scarlet background spatter across the screen with discomforting, eyeflashing rapidity. It’s like a kaleidoscopic, monochrome slide show of the cover art which House produces for the Ghost Box record label, which he also co-runs and records for under the alias of The Focus Group. The skeletal facades of ruined abbeys, a watching horseman on a hill and jagged, blasted winter trees resurrect memories of films such as Roger Corman’s The Tomb of Ligeia (with its ruined abbey and colour-saturated scenes of psychedelic disorientation), Mario Bava’s Black Sunday (also partly set in the hollowed shell of a church), and Michael Reeves’ Witchfinder General (the title sequence of which begins with a zoom in on Vincent Price’s witchfinder watching the results of his visitations – the hanging of a witch – from horseback, the background then filtered to a benighted blue). This is the title sequence of the film The Equestrian Vortex, for which Gilderoy is to assist in the recording and mixing of the sound, and it is all that we will ever get to see of it (in objective form, at least). The titles suggest an English gothic sensibility at work, the kind of horror which blended with a pastoral romanticism and was typified by Hammer films in the 50s through to the early 70s. But what we glean from the sounds we hear throughout and the minimal plot details which are provided (both to us and to Gilderoy) suggests a film far more rooted in the Italian exploitation genre of the 70s – less restrained, more heavily stylised and self-consciously cinematic, and graphically, even gloatingly violent. In fact, just the kind of film which supplanted Hammer’s more traditional fare in the mid-70s period in which Berberian Sound Studio is set. The disjunction between the images of gothic romance presented in the titles and the graphic, hardcore violence which they presage embodies the cultural, temperamental and moral divisions which run throughout Berberian Sound Studio.

The horseman on the hill - Vincent Price is The Witchfinder General
Sound design is obviously absolutely central to Berberian Sound Studio. There is a close visual focus on the means of sound production; the analog equipment with its rows of faders and bobbin-like dials, its revolving reel to reel recorders, undulating oscillators and glowing, coloured buttons and switches. It’s all visually fascinating, right down to the spiral op-art graphics on a tape box, which could almost be part of a graphic score, suggestive of a particular sound and pitch. The equipment makes its own music, comprised of hums, clicks, the fluttering of unspooling film and the flicker of running off tape reels. Gilderoy’s recording charts, which the camera pans across at various intervals, with their grids and columns patterned with blocks and occasionally circles of colour, like some rigorously abstract work of art, codify and categorise the sounds of violence. They too are like graphic scores, the kind produced by experimental and avant garde composers like John Cage and Morton Feldman – instructions and intuitive guidelines for a music of coloured sound which transcends conventional notation. The screams and their electronic transformation provide a sonic expressionism, as do other sounds which permeate the film. The sibilant sighs which accompany Gilderoy along the corridor during his arrival recall the insistent whispers of ‘witch’ which punctuate Goblin’s soundtrack to Dario Argento’s Suspiria, and the hissing of the doors which open to thrust her out of the airport into the teeming rain upon her arrival in Munich.


This haunting sonic quality is given an added dimension for fans of Broadcast when Gilderoy plays the actress Silvia Teresa’s song, the wistful melody which her character sings. The voice we hear is immediately recognisable as that of the late singer Trish Keenan, crooning a gorgeous lullaby as if soothing herself on a dark, lonely night. The tape loop which spools around on its repetitive circuit seems to capture the voice in the way that radio waves travelling through the aether were supposed to pick up spirit voices in the early twentieth century. I found to be a quite heartrending moment, which felt like a conscious tribute on Peter Strickland’s part. He had paid tribute to her in his Sight and Sound interview about the film, stating that ‘speaking purely as a fan of the band, Trish’s passing is a huge loss. It’s not an overstatement to say she was one of the most remarkably gifted musicians of my generation’. There is a further dedication to her in the credits at the end. Broadcast’s music perfectly captures the sound of the era whilst remaining recognisably their own. The music of Ennio Morricone and other Italian soundtrack composers had after all proved an important formative influence. There is some swirling gothic horror organ of the kind used in Roger Corman’s Poe movies; pastoral synth flutes similar to those found on the Witch Cults of the Radio Age and Mother Is The Milky Way records; some rolling jazz drums and bustling harpsichord; and looped and treated vocals which recall Trish’s live improvisations. Further musical or sound design contributions (if there is a distinction to be made between the two) are provided by the Bohman Brothers, Steven Stapleton and Ghost Box artist Roj Stevens, a former Broadcast band member from the early Work and Non Work period. Strickland’s own Sonic Catering Band, whose long experience of producing musique concrete from the recorded sounds of cooking and food preparation must have proved particularly useful. An extract from a Luigi Nono piece adds a little period authenticity, as someone who worked in the Italian radio studios in the 60s and 70s.

Haunting sound design
Some of the musicians we glimpse on the recording stage look like avant garde refugees or moonlighters from the self-same studios, highlighting the fluid traffic which flowed between European experimental and conservatory traditions and the worlds of film soundtrack composition and recording. A moody fellow in a dark cloak is glimpsed bowing groaning metallic sounds from a pendant gong, and the Vangelis-like sound recordist is seen and heard playing sepulchral melodies on a walnut-encased synthesiser, the kind of music which might seep up from dank torchlit catacombs. The unconventional playing of and electroacoustic sculpting of sound from gongs also recalls Stockhausen’s Zyklus and Mikrophonie I pieces, in which their presence (or that of tam-tam gongs) is central. You can imagine the musicians bringing the ideas from these pieces into the film studios. Their sounds, unsettling in their newness and unfamiliarity, their rejection of conventional tonality and sound colour, proved ideal for horror soundtracks, adding to the atmosphere of disorientation and sensory derangement. Daphne Oram and Delia Derbyshire provided electronic arrangements and sounds for The Innocents and The Legend of Hell House and Tristram Cary created unsettling electronic pulsations for Hammer’s film of Quatermass and the Pit. Robert Wise’s 1963 adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s novel The Haunting gains a great deal of power from its disturbing sound design, created by BBC Radiophonic Workshop co-founder Desmond Briscoe, filling its eerie house with a full spectrum of noises ranging from booming crashes to bending creaks and whispered exhalations. It’s like a further cinematic variation added on to Pierre Henry’s musique concrète piece from the previous year, Variations Pour Une Porte Et Un Soupir (Variations for a Door and a Sigh).

The Studio di Fonologia, Milan
Modern composition was incorporated into horror films in the 60s and 70s, with the music of Ennio Morricone, Bruno Nicolai and others for Italian movies blending pop and avant garde styles, and The Exorcist using extracts from pieces by Penderecki and George Crumb (the brief movements of whose Black Angels could have been specifically designed as a sampler for use in such movies). A decade or so before, Toru Takemitsu’s spare score for Kwaidan, which mixes traditional music, musique concrète and modern composition, was uniquely unsettling, especially in the black hair sequence. And Bernard Herrmann’s much-imitated score for Psycho is very Bartokian in its savage and stringent use of strings. Stanley Kubrick would later use part of a Bartok piece, Music for Strings Percussion and Celeste, in The Shining, to disorienting and vertiginous effect. Jarring dissonance and scrabbling, stridulent strings are now almost generic clichés. The vocal performances also recall some of the electronic music which came out of the state-funded RAI (Radio Audizioni Italiane) Italian radio studio (the Studio di Fonologia in Milan) in the 60s and 70s. The composers who worked there often produced pieces deriving from the voice, with Luigi Nono and Luciano Berio in particular favouring vocal works. The groans and inhuman creaks and barks emitted by the actress playing the awakening witch sound like they could have been extracted from Cathy Berberian’s epic psychodrama Visage, an electronic piece created in the Milan studios in 1961 with her then husband Luciano Berio (and it is evidently Berberian who lends her name to the titular studio of the film). An astonishingly powerful piece and performance, this has passages which are genuinely alarming, and seem to put the listener uncomfortably at the centre of a disintegrating psyche. The witch’s vocalisations also bring to mind Mercedes McCambridge’s remarkable vocal work on The Exorcist, begging the question as to whether these performances could be considered as musical themselves. Trevor Wishart’s remarkable Red Bird is another related piece, with its superbly realised transformations of the screams of a political prisoner into the cries of a flock of birds flying overhead – an escape from torment into an Edenic landscape of the mind similar to that which Gilderoy will effect at a moment of unbearable emotional stress. The ‘dangerously aroused goblin’ who records in the sound booth (its only male occupant) begins with a low sustained growl which sounds like the rumbling split tone bass chanting of Tibetan monks before working itself up into a full improv gibber; the sort of vocalisation practised by singers like Phil Minton, Maggie Nicols and Julie Tippetts and sound poets like Henri Chopin, Bob Cobbing and Ernst Jandl.

Kafka's immaculate secretary
Gilderoy’s experiences of the Italian studios are and remain throughout those of an outsider. He is excluded by language, and also by the deliberate slights, subtle and not so subtle bullying and rude rebuttals and rebuffs which he buts up against each and every day. It is a Kafkaesque environment for him, with the simplest requests met with deferrals, redirection, aggression and ignorance. An absurdist plot thread which runs through much of the story concerns his attempts to claim expenses on his flight costs. He is treated as a tiresome intrusion by the coolly immaculate secretary, whose smoothly rounded orange phone seems more a fashion accessory than a means of contacting the relevant people. Rows of small wooden drawers are arrayed up against the wall behind her, and look like they could have stood there for decades, remaining unopened in all but the most extraordinary circumstances. When Gilderoy brings up the issue of his flight expenses with the tyrannical director, Francesco Coraggio, he is treated as if he were a mercenary money-grubber, somehow dishonourable in his request for payment, and is told that there are many who would die for a chance to work on the film for nothing (a statement which runs counter to his later exhortations towards unquestioning professionalism). During his introduction to the film’s monstrously egotistical producer and presiding creative ‘visionary’, Giancarlo Santini, Gilderoy is asked if he has everything he needs. He mildly suggests that a piece of recording equipment needs servicing, and is immediately berated by Coraggio for his unforgivable rudeness in being so negative upon his first meeting. Such inexplicable social blunders and traversals of obscure manners seem to be a component of his every encounter, despite his scrupulously polite demeanour, and they lend proceedings the air of an absurdist drama. Finally, like Kafka’s prospective employee in The Castle, Gilderoy’s very existence is brought into question, with the blank denial from an anonymous official at the end of the line that there ever was a flight from Heathrow at the hour of day he claimed to have travelled.


The director of the film, Coraggio, is like a 70s period Peter Wyngarde character, with wide and gaudily patterned ties, sharply cut suits and a lengthy, looping, neatly trimmed moustache. But there is no trace of Wyngarde’s oily charms in his dessicated and humourless manner. He is a joyless bully, the actresses in particular bearing the brunt of his misogynist contempt. Silvia, who plays the central character of Teresa in the film within the film, is curtly told to keep her opinions on giving nuance to her character to herself and to just do what she’s told. The women are frequently confined to the soundproofed cell of the recording booth where they are required to scream and scream again. These screams become a recurrent punctuating sound motif of the film, a counterpoint to Gilderoy’s temperamental inability to answer back to the workplace bullying which he suffers, and to the pulsing red Silenzio sign which fills the screen at various points. The other male figure of power in the studios is Santini, the self-regarding producer who enthusiastically constructs his own legend. When Gilderoy nervously confesses that he’s never worked on a horror picture before, Santini affects a look of wounded hurtfulness. ‘This is not a horror film’, he explains, as if it is self-evident. ‘It is a Santini film’. Perhaps there are hints of grandiloquent figures such as Andrej Zulawski and Alejandro Jodorowsky here, whose cult messes Possession and Santa Sangre most certainly are horror films, albeit of a singular kind. Santini comes up with the kind of justifications for the lingering scenes of violence against women which he presents which are familiar from European directors of the period, when levels of explicitness grew exponentially in the post-60s liberal climate (this liberality ironically put to illiberal use). Most notorious was Dario Argento’s response to accusations of misogynistic violence in his films. He stated that he found the death of beautiful women more emotionally affecting, or indeed arousing, taking a Berlusconiesque approach to sexual politics (‘I like women, especially beautiful ones. If they have a good face and figure, I would much prefer to watch them being murdered than an ugly girl or a man’.) An honest response, if hardly likely to assuage his critics. Santini is more hypocritically evasive in his response, claiming to ‘hate what is done to these women’, and to be representing historical reality in his inquisitorial sequences (shades of Ken Russell and The Devils). There is a certain amount of questioning of the nature of the more extreme 70s horror material, then, but this, along with the unseen film, is essentially and incidental, background element of Berberian Sound Studio. It’s what happens in front of the screen which engages our attention.

Dario Argento's Suspiria
Producer Giancarlo Santini is smooth and assertively charismatic producer, well aware of his own charms, with his neatly controlled, affluent beard, its grey flecks giving a permissibly minimal hint of maturity, and his Clooneyish good looks, enhanced by a relaxed but expensive sense of 70s style (open-necked and wide-collared shirts and casually chic jackets which project a swinging self-image). Both Santini and director Coraggio’s modish dress (the kind of thing we would expect of studied 70s retro chic) contrasts with the plaid overcoat, woollen cardigans and knitted ties which Gilderoy wears for most of the film. These are clothes which speak of unglamorous but cosy post-war British comfort – practical anti-fashion for a cold and wet island climate, and for drab and austere times. They suggest that Gilderoy is more of an old-fashioned product of the 50s and early 60s than of the liberated 60s and 70s of official retrospective portrayal (that liberation in fact contained within a fairly restricted social compass). He breezes in with his dog at widespread intervals, asserting his ownership of the film and generally acting like a cut-price mogul, demanding obeisance. His initial charm assault, with its instant arm around the shoulders intimacy, swiftly wears off on Gilderoy, who ends up watching his unsubtle advances on favoured actresses with weary indifference. There is an absolute male and female divide within the studio. Although the studios bear a female name (Berberian referring to the singer Cathy Berberian, who recorded some incredible contemporary electronic and vocal music in the Italian radio studios) it is a wholly male environment. The men greet each other effusively in the morning, embracing warmly and joking amongst one another. The women are treated as dumb creatures, however, objects to be coerced into providing what is needed from them. They are frequently isolated within the imprisoning padded cell of the sound booth, a confined space within a confined space, a box within a box.


Gilderoy becomes a part of the women’s world, excluded from the Mediterraenean male camaraderie. A man more in touch with his feminine side, he’s tender-hearted and wholly lacking in aggression. He is far more at ease with Silvia than with the men alongside whom he works. When he wanders out from his room at night, he meets Silvia and talks about his longing for home, expressed through the feel and, more particularly, the sound of autumnal twigs beneath his feet. She in turn confides in him, and tries to help him by suggesting that he needs to be more aggressively and loudly assertive if he’s to get anything he wants. When he tries this approach in his continuing pursuit of his flight expenses, the role is clearly a painful and upsetting one for him to adopt, however. Corragio and Santini talk about Gilderoy in his presence with a contempt disguised only by the fact that he can’t understand their language. When Santini brings in his dog, which ruins a recording with its barking, Coraggio is indulgent of his inconvenient intrusion, recognising his subservient position in the studio’s power structure. He says he’ll allow him in as long as he doesn’t do its business on the floor. ‘What, him or the dog?’, Santini jokes, with a nod of the head towards Gilderoy. As with the women, there is little difference in status, with the dog generally afforded more freedom. Gilderoy is even subjected to the kind of sexual harassment which Sylvia suffers from Santini. When he hears of his desire to leave, Santini confronts him alone in the recording studio and engages upon what amounts to a seduction in order to convince him to stay – perhaps the only approach he is capable of. Feeding him a roundly plum-like fruit, he tells him that ‘here we swallow the seeds’. Without wishing to resort to stereotypes (a statement which is obviously a prelude to doing precisely that), there is a hint of suppressed homosexuality to Gilderoy’s character. He lives at home with his mother, with whom he enjoys a close relationship, as his regular letter writing reveals; and he finds the company of women more comfortable than that of blokish or gruffly taciturn men, without exhibiting any signs of desire towards them. He is also genuinely appalled by the violent treatment of the women on the screen, and by the aggressive way in which Silvia and subsequently Elena (her successor in the role of Teresa) are addressed and directed. At any rate, these aspects of his personality, along with his failure to conform to the overdetermined and overtly displayed masculinity which predominates in the studio might be interpreted in such a way by Santini and the others, who have a fixed and narrow view of gender characteristics.


Gilderoy is a largely passive protagonist, subject to the direction and will of others, but there are hints of indirect resistance. When Silvia finally decides that enough is enough, that she has taken all that she can stand, she comes to Gilderoy to tell him that she is leaving, and that, like the vengeful witch in the film, she will cast her own parting malediction on Santini, Coraggio and the others. Gilderoy responds to her angry despair and pain with a tentatively compassionate ‘can I help you?’ The next morning, the mixing room is strewn with tape, and all of Silvia’s vocal parts have been wiped, with a gloating message left telling Santini exactly what she’s done and why. It’s all done so thoroughly and efficiently that it appears she’s had the assistance of an expert. With Gilderoy’s permission and help, she enters the sound-proofed booth to let out one final, cathartic scream – this time of her own volition, rather than at the relentless behest of a cruel director (who treats requests for water for raw throats as if they were an unwarranted intrusion upon his valuable time, a sign of inherent female feebleness). The banshee wail can be an expressive release of pent-up sound, as with the uninhibited vocal flights from decorative melodic constraint of singers like Patty Waters, Yoko Ono, Cathy Berberian and Christina Carter of Charalambides. The last sight we have of Silvia is of her receding within the frame of the booth against the blank void of the empty screen, swallowed up in the darkness, her mouth open in an expressionist scream. Eventually, the square of illumination which is the light of her burning self disappears, like the picture on an old TV screen compacting into a white dot of potential colour before flickering off. It is an act of self-erasure, the only possibility of defiance for the utterly powerless; the passive aggressive revenge of self-annihilation.

Vangelis - the studio engineer's double
Gilderoy falls apart somewhat after Silvia’s departure. His dress becomes shabbier and more dishevelled, tie abandoned and shirt left unbuttoned with the tail flapping loose. The distinction between inner and outer worlds becomes less clearly defined. There is a certain metaphysical division of space within the claustrophobic interiors in which the film takes place. There is the divide between the sound recording stage and the ‘backroom’ mixing booth which reflects a distinction between direct participatory involvement and the distanced observation of passive recording. Gilderoy’s natural domain is this backroom, but he is soon coaxed out onto the recording stage. When he first arrives, he is taken in there and watches as squelchy sound effects are added to a gore-drenched scene. ‘My God, what are they doing to her?’, he asks as vegetables and fruits are hacked to pieces alongside him, melon flesh standing in for human meat. When this frenzied orgy of organic food abuse is over, Gilderoy is offered a remnant quadrant of water melon by the towering, hirsute figure of the chief mutilator (who bears a certain resemblance to the Vangelis of Aphrodite’s Child days). He turns it down with squeamish politeness as if it were a dripping pound of raw flesh. The film could, in an allegorical sense, be viewed under an alternative title of The Temptation of Gilderoy. Even his name has a certain chivalric air, like something out of an Arthurian romance – the gilded king come to the Castle Perilous of the sound studio, in which the distressed damsels are besieged within the tower of the sound booth. He is drawn into direct participation in the recording stage area and told not to question the nature of what he sees up on the screen, but just to do as he’s directed, like a professional – to just obey orders. But when it comes time to provide the sound for a scene in which a witch tortured by the Inquisition is violated by a red-hot poker (a sound produced by the associatively disturbing means of sizzling cooking oil in a skillet), he refuses, finding that he cannot accept the degree of congruence with what he sees up on the screen that such an action would constitute in his mind.

The issue of complicity and identification is a perennial one in horror movies, particularly those which invite a vicarious sharing in the perspective of the perpetrators of sexualised assault and murder. The black gloves associated with the anonymous killers in Italian giallo films (essentially convoluted and ultra-violent whodunits) are seen here at various intervals switching on the projectors and turning the dials which start it up and set the flickering celluloid images into violent life on the screen. The troubling figure of Argento once more comes to mind here (troubling in part because he’s a director of such evident stylistic bravura rather than a mere seedy exploitation hack). He once more muddies the moral waters by insisting on wearing the black gloves of the killer himself in his films, often in scenes of studiedly sadistic and sexualised murder. When Gilderoy suggests that it might be best for him to leave, that he doesn’t have the stomach for this kind of material, Santini entices him to stay with a plum popped into his mouth, the fruit of temptation which he is not given the option of refusing. When the film (through its protagonist) enters its final dream fugue state, Gilderoy himself becomes the victim onscreen, the revenant witch attacking him with a knife. But he turns her over and, after initially defending himself, asserts his strength and turns defence into relentless counter-assault. This move towards complicity culminates with Coraggio ordering him to wring a scream of more authentic terror from Elisa, the nervous new ingénue actress playing Teresa, in her booth. He assumes that he will do it in the manner that he has on previous occasions, by going in there and shouting at her, intimidating her in a space which dictates uncomfortable proximity. But he does so indirectly, in the way he knows best, flooding her headphones with a painful sonic assault of piercingly shrill white noise. It’s an electronic analogue of a scream, perhaps Gilderoy’s own expression of his simmering anguish and unhappiness. Elisa, whose innocence mirrors that Gilderoy upon his arrival, doesn’t scream but throws her headphones down and strides out of the booth, out of the studio, and off the film, refusing to be subjected to such abuse. It’s a decisive gesture which Gilderoy himself has never been able to make. But his own electronic scream has acted as a warning to Elisa of what she can expect in the Berberian Sound Studio, and has driven her away. In an odd and scarcely intentional way, he proves her saviour. Out on the sound stage, Coraggio slams the table in angry frustration with his fist, his absolute power broken. A length of heavy chain slithers noisily to the floor, link by clanking link. It’s a symbolic casting off of the confining chains of servitude (workers of the world unite etc.) for Elisa and for Gilderoy himself, his cathartic electronic scream the catalyst which allows them both to walk free.

Gilderoy's room - the interior space
If the mixing room and sound stage are the spaces which mark the divide between passive observation and active complicity within the sound studio, the spaces of Gilderoy’s bedsit room (and we never see it situated in any particular external space, defined by exterior shots) and the studio mark the division between the private and public life, inner and outer perspectives, and the amateur and the professional. The film’s confinement to claustrophobic and shadowy spaces (the studio has no windows onto the outside world and Gilderoy is only ever seen in his room at night) reflects the interiority of the story. The red light which demands Silenzio pulses with the beat of blood pumping around the body. The fruit and vegetable matter used to create the sounds of bodies being cut open or shattered is also left to fester in a pile which, shot in slow-moving close-up, begins to disturbingly resemble glistening viscera, making us reflect on the vulnerable organic softness of our insides. Later, when the mixing room is vandalised, we will also see the guts of the machines, ribbons of brown magnetic tape tangled and twisted on the floor. A lingering pan across the fanned green surface of a savoy cabbage, destined for the production of a dry cleaving sound, renders it strange, its wavering rills and ridges like the folds and contours of a brain, imprinted and made complex through experience and repetitive reinforcement. Gilderoy’s room, a night space to which he retires, represents the internal, mental realm, a place for reflection, dream and imaginative exploration. It’s set apart from the social space of the studio, where he is obliged to interact with the violent images onscreen and with the involved and self-aggrandising play of human behaviour and politics which surrounds him and with which he collides with bruising regularity. Many of the musicians who worked anonymously for the Radiophonic Workshop used to stay after hours in the studio, using the dead hours to corral the equipment they needed and, perhaps more importantly, find the personal time to explore their new worlds of sound without interference from studio managers.


The boundaries between these two spaces, the interior and the exterior, which Gilderoy endeavours to keep separate, become confused for the viewer at an early stage, she or he made aware of the beginning of a perceptual shift of which Gilderoy himself is not yet cognisant. There are several cuts which immediately take us from one space to the other. We get a shot of a screaming mouth, tongue and tonsils quivering with the shrillness of the sound which Gilderoy is diligently recording, to an overhead close-up of a whirling blender mixing a red tomato sauce, which he is making on the kitchen surface in his room, simultaneously recording it to provide the sound of a chainsaw. It’s as if the sound analogy has occurred to him as he goes about his private routines, the space of the studios, with its associated perceptual state, leaking through into this personal, internal space. He has brought his work home, effectively. He forgets to put the lid on the blender, however, and is liberally spattered with this home-made Kensington gore (the affectionate name given to Hammer’s vividly bright concoctions of stage blood), crude make-up to accompany the sound effects. Gilderoy’s soaking in this appropriately Italianate form of culinary grue visually suggests that prolonged exposure to the images he is watching every day on the screen is affecting him, that he is being drawn into the world of the studio and its inhabitants, becoming increasingly infected with and complicit in its worldview. There’s something a bit Philip K Dickian about this process, with one consciousness being encompassed and absorbed by another, whether individual or collective.

Gilderoy resists being drawn into or overwhelmed by this world as best he can. But in the latter part of the film, as he increasingly enters a state of dream fugue, the two spaces become increasingly directly connected. He begins to walk through the doors of his wardrobe to emerge through those of the studio. Figures from the film itself begin to invade his room, his interior space, and these scenes are then instantly transferred to the screen in the sound studio. The only film we actually see on the screen, then, is the one playing out in the projecting room of Gilderoy’s skull, which cuts in elements of The Equestrian Vortex which has been incorporated into its subconscious unspooling, spliced together with his personal fears and anxieties. The fusion of the real and the screened is suggestive of the way in which film (and by extension art in general) can become a part of an individual’s interior landscape, and can bring features of that landscape into sharp relief, revealing parts previously hidden – ruptures and quakes throwing up new peaks and opening deep chasms. The psychic disruptions of horror films, with their direct connection with fear responses, can be, for good or ill, particularly effective in provoking the awakening of suppressed feelings. The spaces of The Equestrian Vortex mirror those of Berberian Sound Studio, the film in which it is invisibly embedded. The Academy which is its chief setting (we gather) is undermined by a dank, forgotten subterraenean corridor which marks the spot where witches had been tortured, executed and buried centuries before. The house of rationality is erected upon a dank labyrinth of primitive and violent impulses, long locked away but never really dispelled. Gilderoy’s full transition into the studio space, the equalisation of his inner and outer worlds, is marked by his sudden ability to speak Italian, an indication that he is approaching an understanding of the studio mindset. He becomes a different character in a different film, dressed in a dark and businesslike suit, watching himself up on the screen assaulting the witch. He repeats the words he first uttered in the studio (‘my God, what are they doing to her?’) but his time it is his projected self who is committing the onscreen atrocity. When the slice of melon, source of the sounds of terrible mutilation, is offered to him, he accepts, and takes a bite of its dripping pink flesh. His temptation would appear to have been fulfilled, the forbidden fruit of self-knowledge swallowed.

FC Judd - garden shed inventions
Further binary oppositions and polarities run throughout the film, fundamental differences which invite misunderstanding and mutual incomprehension. Little capital is made out of the cultural clash between English and Italian customs and sensibilities, which could have taken the film in the overfamiliar direction of the comedy of national stereotypes - a kind of Carry on Dario caper. There is a tension between Gilderoy’s intuitive approach to work and the ‘professionalism’ expected in the studio which echoes the difference between the inspired amateurism of British electronic musicians and sound designers and those in the state-funded radio studios of the continent and the commercially driven TV and film worlds. The British myth of the garden shed inventor is an enduring and attractive one – the idea of the maverick pioneer who cobbles together their own unique junk-sculpture instrumentation from wartime surplus oscillators and motors and whatever objects can be unearthed from the recycled detritus of the past, with clunkily mechanical tape machines to record and transform the resultant magical sounds. Gilderoy very much conforms to this type. He carries a picture with him of his garden workshop back in England, which is indeed housed in a shed. He has previously mostly worked on children’s programmes, which brings to mind the Radiophonic Workshop’s sound and music for Doctor Who, Blue Peter’s Bleep and Booster cartoon, and LPs for music and movement classes, as well as F.C.Judd’s soundtracking of the early 60s SF puppet series Space Patrol. It also summons up fond memories of Oliver Postgate, a benevolent inventor, film-maker and children’s storyteller who also worked out of his garden shed, which was converted into a makeshift animation studio, with equipment knocked up as need demanded. At one point, during a powercut in the studio, Gilderoy captivates the gathered cast and crew with a pure, gently wavering ‘UFO’ sine wave, created with just a light bulb and a wire letter rack. Shades of the magic sound conjured by the likes of Delia Derbyshire and John Baker from lampshades and wine bottles. By the warm, kindly glow of the candlelight, the atmosphere becomes enchanted, the sinister piles of fruit on the table props in a tableau from a Renaissance or Dutch painting. Gilderoy becomes a conjurer, and a different, more generous working environment, and film, momentarily seems possible. Then the electricity snaps back on and the spell is broken. This is the one time when Gilderoy’s own wordlview, the childlike magic of the incidental and the everyday as he perceives it, is briefly conveyed to his hosts, and wholly absorbs them. But power demands efficiency, the ‘professionalism’ and concomitant obedience to his will which Coraggio is always demanding.

The highly visible and audible electronic machinery which blinks, clicks and whirs into action throughout is also set in opposition to the vegetable world produces the sounds of the violated body, and also to Gilderoy’s reverence for the natural world. The hard and mechanical contrasting with the soft and organic. The machine world of the studio extends to the mechanical behaviour of its male engineers and overseers, and is contrasted with the ‘feminine’ world of natural form, and the women whose presence in the studio is seen as an alien one. To Coraggio and Santini, people are just another component, soft extensions of the machinery. They flick their switches, turn their dials and expect them to run in perfect synchrony every time, giving them a swift kick if the prove recalcitrant. Gilderoy bridges the two worlds, rather like the exquisitely bored secretary in the linking corridor outside, the guardian of the interzone, with her wooden shelves and rounded orange phone blending the mechanical with natural form and material. He shows Silvia a circling tape loop from which her own voice repeats a simple melody (marked Teresa’s Song) and demonstrates how he can alter the sound with various filters (the conjurer’s hand waving passes). She is fascinated, regarding him as if her were a sonic alchemist, producing aural illusions to delight her. A connection, if not exactly a friendship, is initiated. This is the benevolent, playful use of machines, toys and tools which are expressive on an innocent and very human level. Later on, Gilderoy will use the same devices to create a torturous assault of painful white noise, and unbearable and inhuman expression of pitiless mechanistic violence.

Box Hill - Gilderoy's pastoral heart
At one point in the film, the machine world of the studio in which Gilderoy toils is torn apart to reveal his English pastoral soul, which lies beneath the surface of his modernist tinkering. The celluloid image bubbles and burns, combusting in a similar way to the apparent conflagration of the film itself in Ingmar Bergman’s Persona, or the nova which engulfs the final frame of Monte Hellman’s Two Lane Blacktop. Gilderoy’s Box Hill heart is laid bare, as we look down on the Surrey countryside spreading out below its commanding ridge. Vaughan Williams’ Lark Ascending takes over the soundtrack, the ultimate expression of yearning English pastoralism. The sight of this expanse of green fields, woodlands and downland slopes is almost overwhelming after the gloomy, claustrophobic interiors of the sound studio, tinted with the red of the recording warning signs and the baleful reflections from the blood-soaked screen. Vaughan Williams’ emotive piece also provides a burst of traditional orchestral music as a pointed counterpoint to the expressionistic electronic soundworld in which Gilderoy has been immersed. The talismanic presence of the Bohman brothers, Adam and Jonathan, purveyors of a playful variety of musique concrète and improvisatory sound-making in the lineage of post-war garden-shed inventors, on the brow of the hill, positions a different stream of music within this quintessentially English landscape. They are like more parochial Caspar David Friedrich wanderers surveying distant vistas from the heights they’ve scaled, or idealised rustic types on the Edenic Darenth Valley hillsides of a Samuel Palmer landscape. Electronic and experimental music can be human and expressive of a non-technophile present with an awareness of tradition, as witness the artists on the Ghost Box label, who create their own versions of plangent electronic English pastoralism. A collage of details from Ordinance Survey maps detailing Box Hill and its surrounds outline the contours of Gilderoy’s heart, the archaeological treasures lodged within.

Persona - the burning screen
This pastoral vision is also reflected in his reverence for nature. Alongside his work for children’s TV, we learn that he has also produced the sound for a variety of nature programmes. He’s a patient observer and recorder of the soundscapes of the natural world in the manner of Chris Watson, Bernie Krause or Dan Gibson. In his room, a spindly spider wanders several times across the desk he’s working at. Each time, he carefully picks it up with a piece of paper and carries it to the window, depositing it gently outside. On one level, this can be seen as a symbolic gesture, an assiduous casting aside of the more sinister and predatory aspects of his psyche (the spider being one of gothic horror’s emblematic creatures). But it also represents his refusal to accede to the demands of the studio, to adopt their ethos. As the film progresses and his persona begins to show signs of strain, distress cracks spreading, we await the moment at which he will break and slam his fist down on the delicate creature. But he never does. He associates nature with sound, as indicated by the nostalgia evoked by the snapping of dry branches beneath his feet. Amongst the mementoes of home which he brings with him are some of his recordings of local soundscapes, labelled and categorised with a naturalist’s taxonomical mind. The use of natural produce to create sounds analogous to those of exaggerated violence is therefore something of a desecration of his semi-Pagan reverence for nature, and his sensitivity to its soundworld. Gilderoy’s Pagan sensibilities (a kind of deep Englishness) in themselves go against the grain of the Catholicism which at least nominally presides in the studios, as signified by the crucifixes, with figures of the suffering Christ attached, which hang on the walls of the mixing room and of Gilderoy’s bedroom – his two spaces. This underlying Catholic element might in itself hint at the greater tolerance of the Italians for images of suffering and pain, of prolonged, expiatory martyrdom.

The letter which Gilderoy exchanges with his mother focus on the progress of a nest of chiff-chaff chicks brooded on the side of his creative garden shed. As he begins to unravel in the studio, the news from home also darkens. The chicks are all killed by what his mother assumes is a magpie, their torn bodies thrown out of the nest and left torn and ragged below (a scene recalling the defenestration of one of the female students at the academy earlier in the film, the sound of her breaking body provided by a ripe melon dropped from a stretching height). Nature seems to be imitating art, or perhaps there was an element of truth in Santini’s claim that his representation of brutal violence is an honest expression of the harsh way of the world. Gilderoy certainly doesn’t want to believe this. It disturbs his sense of pacific harmony, like a needle suddenly and clumsily lifted and scratched across an LP of the Lark Ascending, creating an ugly and disruptive aural tear. It could also be seen as an assault on the very cradle of his creativity, his shed, with the chicks possibly just collateral damage. There is a sense of guilt, that the senseless tearing apart of the chicks happened because he wasn’t there to protect them. There is a parallel sense that something similar might happen to the new actress Elena (the second Teresa) if her were to leave the studio. The connection is made between Elena and Gilderoy’s home, and in particular his mother (mother is home) when she reads to him from her script. The words are those his mother wrote to him in her last letter, expressing her distress at the bloody slaughter of the chicks, and her bewildered supposition that it must have been the work of a magpie. Gilderoy is horrified at what the supposed magpie has done. But could the magpie in fact be seen as his own self, or has his drift towards moral complicity with the violence onscreen, itself an assertion of greater natural or assumed male power and strength, summoned the malevolent bird? In creating an identification between Elena and his mother, and with her distress and evident sense of isolation, Gilderoy’s sonic assault on Elena (albeit insistently directed by Coraggio) is also a lashing out at his mother, adding a further Freudian element to this climactic drama.



In the end, Gilderoy reaches an understanding both of the impulses which underlie the film, and of the presence of such impulses within himself. Having committed his act of violence, and having done no harm, indeed inadvertently having helped the object of his assault, he reaches a state of calm self-awareness, and consciously rejects the lure of the studio and its reductive worldview. Like Elisa, he walks out of the machinery. He stares at the blank screen and a small circle of white light begins to glow, pulsate and expand. It’s as if Elisa’s disappearance into the void in her framing capsule of light (the light of life) is being reversed, and she is returning in a blaze of radiance – a redeeming Marian figure. The dot expands until the screen can hardly contain the blinding whiteness. The blood-red and black images which have been projected onto it (including the title sequence we saw at the start) and into Gilderoy’s tender psyche are wiped clean. Standing before the screen, his figure, face raised upwards, is outlined against the light pouring out into the studio until the high contrast background results in his being wholly absorbed into it, indistinguishable from the all-pervasive illumination. In a positive reversal of Silvia’s self-erasure, in which she was swallowed into a void of deep darkness, he disappears into and becomes light. In a sense (and bearing in mind the crucifixes in both the mixing room and his bedroom, his interior and exterior spaces) he redeems her, having asked if he could help her. We imagine him transported back to his Box Hill Eden, beginning the walk down the hill and across the fields to home, saying hello to mother before heading straight for his garden shed.

Tuesday, 19 June 2012

Berberian Sound Studio and Cathy Berberian

Cathy Berberian reads the score

The premiere of Berberian Sound Studio, director Peter Strickland’s follow up to his debut film Katalin Varga, has been announced for the Edinburgh film festival. It stars Toby Jones, so nobly affecting as the firm moral spokesman for reason and good in the beleaguered supermarket community of The Mist, and so creepily sinister as the game-playing dream master toying with the Doctor, Amy and Rory in the Doctor Who episode Amy’s Choice. Here, he plays an English sound engineer plunged into the world of 70s Italian exploitation film-making and slowly getting lost in the sonic worlds he’s creating, and in the feuding and personal politics of the cheap studio in which he’s working. All of which makes it seem like Strickland is putting his youthful experiences of travelling from Reading to the Scala Cinema in London, where the films of Dario Argento, Lucio Fulci and other Italian exploitation directors were a core part of the repertory, to good use. Strickland talks about his Scala experiences in a Sight and Sound interview (in the November ’09 issue) from the time of Katalin Varga’s release, recalling how ‘the cinema smelled of cats, dope and beer. The Northern Line ran underneath. It was a huge epiphany’. In the same interview, he talks about how important sound design and music was to his film, and to his enjoyment of cinema in general. He’d originally wanted the Popul Vuh music which Werner Herzog had used to such sublime effect in Nosferatu for Katalin Varga, although it’s perhaps a good thing that he couldn’t afford it, since it would have sparked unhelpful associations in the minds of some viewers. He remembers seeing Eraserhead at the Scala, and being particularly struck by Alan Splet’s creation of an unsettling sonic backdrop. Katalin Varga has similarly ominous and haunting music and sound, with the buzzing, swarming and throbbing electronica of Stephen Stapleton and Geoff Cox, and of Stapleton’s Nurse With Wound creating a sense of dread anticipation, and acting both as a projection of the dark emotions driving the characters and as an evocation of the landscape through which they move and which to a great degree shapes them. Strickland himself plays in an electronic music trio, The Sonic Catering Band, alongside Colin Fletcher and Tim Kirby, who make a kind of modern musique concrete using the sounds of cookery as source material. You can hear what this tasty culinary fusion sounds like from the extract of Live from the Canteens of Atlantis which plays over the end credits of Katalin Varga. Strickland also supplements his film-making work with the odd spot of DJ-ing, and the extent to which music and cinema hold equal weight for him can be found in his comment (again in the Sight and Sound interview) that Scott Walker’s song The Seventh Seal (whose opening trumpet flourish, which seems to relocate the knight’s quest from Sweden to Spain, ushers in the peerless Scott 4 album) ‘was more important to me than Bergman’s The Seventh Seal’. Much as I love Scott, and his soaring ballad interpretation of the film, I’d have to veer the other way and pledge my loyalty to Ingmar and his timeless film. With his love of music and care for the sonic elements of a film, it is appropriate that Berberian Film Studio is to be released by Warp Films, the cinematic offshoot of the Warp record label. It’s long been known that James Cargill, half of the partnership that was Broadcast, was to provide the soundtrack. But it has now been announced that this will be credited to Broadcast, and a soundtrack record subsequently released as such. This is incredibly exciting, and presumably means that the music will incorporate recordings of the late Trish Keenan’s vocals.



All of which brings me to the title. I’m assuming that Berberian makes reference to the mezzo-soprano Cathy Berberian, a remarkable singer who pushed the boundaries of vocal music and performance from her first recordings in the 50s through to her sudden and unexpected death in 1983 at the age of 57. Brian Morton, in his piece on Berio’s Sequenza III in his book The Blackwell Guide to Recorded Contemporary Music, describes her as being ‘one of the most significant musical performers and collaborators of the (twentieth) century’. Some people might now her through her album of Beatles covers, Beatles Arias, which is often cited as the height of the classical music establishment’s embarrassing efforts to appropriate the group’s songs as examples of contemporary ‘composition’ in the 60s (and which was almost certainly the source of the French and Saunders sketch in which they played operatic divas making a recording of Kylie’s I Should Be So Lucky). In fact, as the hilarious film of her singing Ticket to Ride makes quite clear, Berberian was well aware of the absurdity of some aspects of the whole endeavour, and there were definite elements of pastiche and comical role-playing involved (unsurprisingly given the arrangements by the Dutch composer Louis Andriessen, who has always shown a resolutely disrespectful regard for classical norms). These indicated the degree to which performance was a key part of her art, which married the concert with the theatre stage. She had studied mime, drama and dance (and stage writing) at Columbia University in addition to her music activities (which travelled to Milan to explore further), and combined all of these disciplines to mesmerising effect in performance. This can be heard in the piece Recital I for Cathy by Luciano Berio from 1971, although hearing it on a recording (you can find it on the Recital for Cathy CD on RCA) you lose a significant dimension, as the staging is integral to its impact. She gets to sing in a variety of styles, Berio putting together a musical collage which could almost act as a sampler of her diverse range. There are moments of ‘legitimate’ classical recital (passages from two Monteverdi pieces), of atonal modernism, comical circus brass and louche Berlin cabaret (a snatch of Marlene from The Blue Angel, demonstrating Berberian’s talent for pastiche and imitation). The tensions between these warring styles occasionally threatens to tear the whole piece apart, with the orchestra intruding with noisy eruptions. In between these musical scraps, Berberian carries on a stream of muttering verbiage, an expression of the mental chatter circling the mind of the projected singer whose role she is inhabiting. This stream of consciousness occasionally burbles over into a dramatic version of the Sprechstimme which Schoenberg used for his 1912 expressionist horror fantasy Pierrot Lunaire, an amalgamation of spoken and sung text. For stage performances of the piece, Berberian was draped in steadily accumulating layers of costume, increasingly burdened by the multiple personae she was obliged to put on. She ends up in an ominous pose, with a rope noosed around her neck and a vividly bloodstained veil draped over her head.

Berberian and Berio

Berberian met the composer Luciano Berio in Milan in 1949, whilst she was studying in Italy. She’d been born and brought up in the Bronx and Queens districts of New York by her Armenian parents and become involved in numerous musical and artistic pursuits in the area. She attended Columbia University, from which she travelled over the Atlantic to France and thence to Milan. Berio and Berberian, whose complementary surnames seemed to presage their personal compatibility, married the year after their first meeting, and embarked upon a fruitful musical relationship which would endure beyond their separation in 1964. Brian Morton rightly asserts that she has to be regarded as a co-composer of the works which Berio wrote for her, so completely do they rely on her unique vocabulary of extended vocal sounds. In 1955, Berio helped to set up and became the co-director of the Studio di Fonologia Musicale in Milan as a part of the Italian National Radio (RAI) station. This was one of a number of experimental electronic music ‘laboratories’ in Europe and the US, usually connected to state-funded public broadcasting networks or the research departments of technological corporations (The Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Centre was one of the few associated with a university, and was established in 1952, a few years after Berberian had left for the continent). The first of these had been the Groupe de Recherches Musicale in Paris, set up in 1951 by the two Pierres, Schaeffer and Henry in conjunction with the Office of French National Radio-Television (ORTF). This was followed shortly afterwards by the Studio for Electronic Music in Cologne, where Stockhausen constructed his early tape pieces; the Centre for Electronic Music in Eindhoven (set up in 1956), associated with the Philips Research Labs, where Edgar Varese composed his Poeme Electronique (blasted through hundreds of speakers inside Xenakis’ Philips Pavilion at the 1958 Brussells World’s Fair); and, of course, the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, established, after much lobbying by Daphne Oram, in 1956. Amongst the pieces created at the Milan studios was John Cage’s Fontana Mix (1959), one of his indeterminate works, whose broad instructions read ‘to be prepared from the score for the production of any number of tracks of magnetic tape, or for any number of players, any kind and number of instruments’. The score to which Cage referred was a series of transparent sheets, dotted, gridded and contour-lined with graphic notation resembling a map of sound. These suggested a dense, sedimentary layering of elements, a sonic geology. Berberian incorporated Cage’s own Aria (1958), another indeterminate piece using a graphic score which is little more than a series of coloured, subheaded squiggles with such helpful guidance as ‘not as a birth but as love’ and ‘will you give me to tell you?’. The colours indicate different singing styles, such as contralto (red), Sprechstimme (black with a parallel dotted line), jazz (dark blue), folk (green), and Marlene Dietrich (a category all to herself and, naturally, purple). Berberian’s considerable input into the shaping of the piece means that, once more, she can effectively be considered a co-composer, no matter what Cage himself might have claimed.

Musical cartography - part of John Cage's score for Fontana Mix

Her introduction of a vocal element into Cage’s electro-acoustic collision of sounds brought it under the overarching aesthetic of the Milan studios, which favoured the human voice as a source sound. Luciano Berio shared Cage’s fascination with the work of James Joyce, and with the musical quality of his language. His piece Chamber Music from 1953 uses poems from Joyce’s early collection which Berberian sings to clarinet, cello and harp accompaniment, the harp descending in single, steadily paced, deliquescent notes. Her US-Armenian accent, flavoured by years living in Italy, seems almost to take on a pleasing Irish lilt in places to fit in with the setting. The ‘Strings in the earth and air’ poem which is one of the ones Berio sets is also familiar from Incredible String Band singer and multi-instrumentalist Robin Williamson’s bardic interpretation on his first solo LP Myrrh. Joyce’s words were also the starting point for Berio’s 1958 tape piece Thema: Omaggio a Joyce, this time taken from the opening of the Sirens chapter of Ulysses, a passage in which the writer breaks down customary linguistic form and sense. The first line, ‘bronze by gold heard the hoofirons, steelyringing imperthnthn, thnthnthn’, makes it clear that Joyce was seeking sense from sound more than meaning deriving from logically constructed grammar. Open-ended ow, oo and ee sounds are contrasted with closed ings, lisping th’s and sibilant ss’s (evoking the hiss of retreating waves). It’s a challenge to declaim it aloud, but Berberian’s initial sonorous and sensual reading (did Kate Bush hear this, I wonder?) is a thing of unadorned beauty in itself. Berio takes elements of sentences, words, and fragments of words from her interpretation of Joyce’s prose, isolating their different sound qualities and manipulating and superimposing them. The music inherent in Joyce’s language is released by all the splicing, multiplication, speeding up or slowing down and spatial filtering of the sounds articulated by Berberian. It really is like a language laboratory, investigating the fundamental matter of language, its affective nature. The elements of speech are transformed into pure sound, devoid of overt meaning but possessed of a musical quality which communicates on its own level. They also thus reflect back on the elements of pure sound in the original ‘nonsense’ text. The song of the siren bears its own meaning, bypassing the distancing logic of language and speaking directly to the heart.



Visage (1960-1), another electronic piece constructed through painstaking tape-editing and built around Berberian’s voice, dispenses with words altogether, apart from an ironic ‘parole’ (words or speech in Italian) clearly articulated in a breathy, ghostlike whisper towards the middle, as if to remind us of the language of a former existence. This really brings Berberian’s extended vocal techniques to the fore, as the piece relies entirely on her extra-linguistic palette of sounds for its colouration and expressive power. It’s a quite astonishing work, built upon an absolutely fearless performance. As with Omaggio a Joyce, the voice is subject to the electronic manipulation of tape edits and effects, but here they are much more extensive and sustained (the piece lasts about 21 minutes). The opening minutes are genuinely disturbing, all the more so for the use of identifiably human sounds which have gone beyond the normal range of human expression. They have been transported into the realm of the uncanny, of supernatural voices sounding from the beyond. I wouldn’t be surprised if it was this piece in particular which inspired the title of Strickland’s new film. It begins with a hissing exhalation of breath which expands like fog to create a chill, all-encompassing atmosphere. Sibilant, floating spirit chatter flitters through this mist, approaching from and receding into the depthless obscurity. A distressed voice makes stuttering attempts at speech, but gets caught on hard, jagged consonants, and is unable to articulate a single word. There is a sudden burst of jarring laughter, tinged with hysteria, and a voice muttering to itself in a nonsense language comprehensible to nobody else, perhaps not even to itself. It sounds like it is reciting a story, or swiftly recounting the fading recollections of a life before they all fragment and dissipate again. The moods of the piece shift and reconfigure themselves, often with disorientating alacrity or suddenness. Laughter morphs into weeping, which them modulates seamlessly back into laughter. These recognisably human sounds then undergo a transformation into staccato insect stridulation and the buzzing of swarming flies – sounds which could easily have been used on the soundtrack of Katalin Varga. At one point, an electronic space of glitter and sparkle is created through filter and echo effects, within which the moaning sounds of pleasure reverberate, a passage which caused the prudish Italian Radio Corporation to ban a broadcast of the piece. This spatial dimension of pleasure is all too soon torn apart by a violent, abrasive sound, as if some external force were also intent on crushing any trace of sensual delight. As a whole, Visage gives us the sense of being privy to the turbulent tides of a psyche which is either being assailed by an external force, or is tearing itself apart from within. It is a wholly remarkable work of immense power, giving the lie to the impression that the music of the post-war avant-garde was all bloodless, over-intellectualised serialism.



Berberaian repeated the vocal pyrotechnics of Visage in the 1965-6 piece Sequenza III, one in a series of compositions in which Berio explored the full range of a particular instrument. Here, she sings without the transformative magic of studio tape editing techniques. The piece allows Berberian to unleash the full expressive power of her extended vocal armoury. We are taken on an exhilarating, emotional and exhausting thrill-ride, which takes in the highs and lows of tongue clicks and rolls, mutterings, laughter, shivers, ecstatic sighs, trills, humming, coughs, neighs, croons, operatic outbursts, ululations, Indian whoops, screams, gasps, gibberings, full-throated declamations and a short passage in which she seems to become possessed and start speaking in tongues (although the piece as a whole could be regarded in this light). It demonstrates the huge variety of sounds which the human mouth and vocal chords are capable of producing, and comparisons with other pieces in the Sequenza series demonstrate that it is an instrument of far greater flexibility than anything else to be found in the music shop. Berberian’s performance is heroic, outlining a whole new vocabulary of musical sound, and also demonstrating how to use it in a directly affecting manner. Berio continued to write for Berberian after their marriage had ended (indeed, Sequenza III comes from this period), most notably in Folk Songs which, probably because it is quite straightforwardly tonal, is one of his best known pieces. It’s a suite of arrangements of songs from around the world with a traditional or folkish flavour. A good many of them, however, are actually composed or at least adapted from traditional material. For example, Kentucky-born John Jacob Niles’ Irish-style ballad Black is the Colour of my True Love’s Hair (also sung by Nina Simone and by Patty Waters, who turns into an extended Visage-style psychodrama) and the two pieces from Canteloube’s Songs of the Auvergne. Other songs take us to France, to Azerbaijan (via a love song unearthed by Berberian from a cracked Russian 78), Sardinia, Italy and Sicily. Berberian also gets a chance to reconnect with her Armenian roots (she had sung in an Armenian folk group when she was at high school in New York) in the song Loosin Yelav. Folk songs may be more conventional in form than the electronic pieces or Sequentia, but it shares, in a more stately fashion, their collage structure. The contrasting juxtaposition of divergent national styles takes the listener on a virtual global tour of Western songforms. There’s a utopian element too, with the drawing together of international songs through unified arrangements (and the inclusion of songs written by composers using material and styles from beyond their borders) highlighting their similarities rather than their differences, and pointing to the universal nature of the essential human concerns and emotions which they convey.



Other major twentieth century composers also wrote pieces specifically for Berberian, tailoring them to her musical persona, or simply trusting her to understand and communicate their particular artistic intentions. Stravinsky entrusted her to deliver his serialist Elegy for JFK in 1964, and William Walton wrote a ‘sequel’ to his famous piece Façade for her in 1979. This was cheekily titled Façade 2, perhaps in recognition of the dawn of the blockbuster sequel. Façade was initially written in 1921-2, and was a suite of light music with jazzy flavours wrapping around a recital of semi-abstract poems by Edith Sitwell. These poems, with their playful experimentation with sound and sense, and Walton’s musical evocation of them are an earlier example of a composer hearing music in the sounds of language, presaging the later Joycean text-based pieces of Cage and Berio. Walton’s Façade 2 was in fact a revision, replacing some of Sitwell’s texts and adding new numbers. Sitwell’s work also caught the ear of Trish Keenan of Broadcast (who mentioned her in a Wire interview in the context of the Witch Cults of the Radio Age LP track Seancing Song). Keenan was beginning her own explorations into ‘nonsense’ lyrics, associative meanings, word sounds and the electronic manipulation of the human voice on the Broadcast albums Tender Buttons (with its Gertrude Stein referencing title) and the Witch Cults LP (made with Ghost Box audio collagist The Focus Group), as well as in increasingly experimental live performances. These later trends in the band which had by this point been whittled down to the central creative and personal partnership of Keenan and James Cargill, seem very much in line with the work of Berberian and Berio. I wonder if she’d heard much of her work. There is a definite affinity with some of Berberian’s work, and immersion in a sound world which always remains rooted in the reality of the human voice. This makes Broadcast the ideal choice to soundtrack Strickland’s Berberian Sound Studio.



Berberian also composed music herself. The 1966 piece Stripsody is a hugely enjoyable four minutes or so in which she vocalises the sounds of a comic strip, drawn for her by the artist Roberto Zamarin (the strip ideally projected during the performance). The strip effectively becomes a highly colourful graphic score, with Berberian voicing the noisy vitality straining against the boundaries of the frames in the best comics (and she was an avowed fan). It’s a mini-symphony of comic-strip sound effects, its quick-cut edits marking the jump from frame to frame, and from comic to comic (we get samples of hard-boiled gangster strips, westerns, superheroes, romances, animal comics and more). It echoes the rapid shifts and musical pratfalls of the Warner Brothers cartoon music of Carl Stalling (never was a composer less aptly named). There are kerplunks and the bang bang of pistols; the budda budda of machine gun fire and the sirens of police cars; the mewing of cats and the barking of dogs; stomping and thudding (as in ‘stomp, stomp, thud, thud’); the high-speed gallop of cowboys’ horses and the whistle of Indians’ arrows; the sucking and smacking of kisses and the revving of souped-up motors. At one point, there is a Charlie Brownish ‘good grief’, and a brief snatch of Ticket to Ride, pointedly not sung in the operatic style, a burst of which it unexpectedly emerges from. Towards the end, Cathy utters the immortal (if slightly altered) words ‘it’s a plane…no. It’s a bird…no. It’s Superman!’ The piece finishes with snores and zzzzs turning into the whining, whimpering buzz of a fly silenced by a terminal ‘bang’. A whimper and a bang to end. She certainly pulls it all off with a lot more conviction than Brigitte Bardot mustered for Serge Gainsbourg's Comic Strip.

A small frame of the Stripsody score

An audio version of Stripsody can be found on the Cathy Berberian site, as can her beautiful rendition of La Flute de Pan, from Debussy’s sublime Trois Chansons de Bilitis. Berberian died of a heart attack in 1983 on her way to a performance in Rome. She was going to sing The Internationale at a celebration of the centennial of Karl Marx’s birth in the style of Marilyn Monroe. It would have been a gesture which simultaneously celebrated Marx’s legacy and lightly mocked the humourless, ascetic earnestness of some of his acolytes. Now that would really have been something to hear.