Jameson on Neuromancer

version

Well-known member
 
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luka

Well-known member
Gibson is not a good writer. In fact he's a terrible writer. One of the worst ever. But it's still a potent, though very hokey book. I don't think Jameson has anything interesting to say about it. Probably the Marxist materialism is the stumbling block here.
 

version

Well-known member
Well, if nothing else, hopefully this thread provides another opportunity for barty to say 'righteous dub, mon'.
 

version

Well-known member
A former Dissensian's Neuromancer soundtrack's finally getting a full release:



In 1994, as the book's 10th anniversary was on hand, New York duo Black Rain were commissioned to make a soundtrack to the audio book version of Neuromancer. Read by the author himself, this document, originally publish on a series of cassettes, would go on to be recognised as a unique glimpse into Gibson’s sensing of the characters and places that make up the Neuromancer zone.

Following a period of work as an expanded collective, Stuart Argabright and Shinichi Shimokawa, the two core members of Black Rain, decided to strip back their unit largely to a duet format. Their focus became more engaged around studio practice, and it was this refocusing that was ultimately serendipitous. As they started work on Neuromancer a number of new approaches and techniques emerged and with them came a new sonic language the pair had only imagined previously.

The audio book was a huge success and the soundtrack too was recognised for its brooding and post-industrial electronic grind. Since that time however, the recordings have largely remained in obscurity. While a couple of the pieces have surfaced in various editions including an excellent compilation by Blackest Ever Black, the entire suite of pieces has remained unpublished until this moment.

Working off the original master tapes, this edition (like the book), folds and morphs over itself in an episodic stratification. Pieces emerge, like strange architecture, from one another forming a sonic environment that feels almost tangible. I spent many weeks working on these tapes and also on the connections between the pieces. In collaboration with Stuart, our joint aim was to create a version of the soundtrack that speaks to the very atmosphere of the text itself. It’s a delight to share this collection of work for the first time.
 

sus

Moderator
Who is the Dissensian?

I've long been wanting to go further in combining music and writing. I've been working a lot on developing a vox libre, a free and spoken-first style of writing. And listening to Ashley's operas, he's clearly interested in this. I've been thinking that @mvuent should make his blogposts audio documents where the sounds discussed interweave with / layer into the discussion.
 
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