Great piece, you might like this
In Response to Julian Henriques
Chara Stergiou, Goldsmiths, University of London
DJ
1. Someone who plays records and talks on the radio or at an event where people dance to recorded popular music, such as a nightclub.1
2. By dramatically emphasising the connections between songs, by juxtaposing them or seamlessly overlaying them, the modern club DJ is not so much presenting discrete records as combining them to make something new.2
Lecture
1. A formal talk on a serious subject given to a group of people, especially students.
2. An angry or serious talk given to someone in order to criticize their behaviour.3
In the past couple of years, I instinctively developed what I call a “DJ Lecture.”4 It is a DJ set performed as lecture or a lecture performed as a DJ set. In other words, a collection of songs and theoretical references interwoven and performed in order to tell a unique story. It all started during the preparation of my contribution to a public event of the Ocean as Archive class of 2018-2019 in the MA CAT at Goldsmiths. I needed to speak of an often unacknowledged, speculative but very real and oppressed self of the Greek subjectivity as shaped after the 1990s following its introduction to a capitalist reality. Such intense concerns would have been better corresponded as an embodied experience rather than in a regular talk format.
Songs are complete oeuvres. Sonorous and lyrical artefacts that encapsulate stories which are often hard to express effectively in plain words. With no clear primary intention in mind, I started to construct a journal of songs that related to the weekly topics of the course: sonic stories of oppression and the sea through recent samples of Greek popular music. Influenced by a very intense concert I attended at that time, it was clear to me that there is a particular collective sentimentality that a live performance can offer to its audience. Just a three-minute piece of performed music could shake immediately the grounds of our collective unconscious better than any other “sovereign of knowledge” could do.5 A song as a medium works literally as an affective transmitter which embodies social experience. Sociopolitical registers and psychographs of one’s self could emerge as well through its lyricism while sometimes functioning as a provider of small doses of “the structure of feeling” of a population at certain moments of time.6 Better than formal history, richer in feeling of a social experience.
A DJ Lecture is based on a set of bibliographical references/samples we usually hear in a typical lecture and a heterogeneity of song samples of diverse aesthetic style that attempt to speak of a fictional but very real social imaginary. From rock to hip-hop, techno and folk music, to new wave and experimental pieces, the only canon there was the date of production of the songs and, mostly, their lyricism, therefore, their capacity to create affect. Different songs, different styles, different stories. However, wasn’t this kind of fragmentary sampling and heterogenenity one of the actual powers of DJ-ing?
From its very first appearance, the word ‘Disc Jockey’ primarily obtained a dismissive hue describing the person —music selector— who replaced the live music played on radio.7 Today, the DJ is a metamusician.8 The “epitome of the postmodern artist” who makes musical collages while also being a “post-producer” who “selects cultural objects inserting them into new contexts” being a kind of a magician playing with the feelings of an audience in a room and handling its atmosphere.9
A song alone may tell a story, but playing with the setlist (in our case a sonic and a verbal one), selecting and montaging its order, a unique story of a speculative nature can emerge which, in the case of the DJ Lecture, can break the grounds of an “anhedonistic” academia.10 If a lecture is “a formal talk on a serious subject” then, let’s play with this formality and make our unsound stories “serious” and more “real.”11 Or, even if a lecture is “an angry talk given to someone in order to criticise their behaviour,” then why not express collective and unacknowledged resentment and anger before it becomes grief?12
Brewster, Bill, and Frank Broughton. Last Night a DJ Saved My Life: The History of the Disc Jockey. New York: Grove Press, 2000.
Bourriaud, Nicolas. Post Production. Culture as Screenplay: How Art reprograms the world. New York: Sternberg Press, 2002.
Cambridge Dictionary. “Disc Jockey.” Accessed January 30, 2021. https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/disc-jockey.
Cambridge Dictionary. “Lecture.” Accessed January 30, 2021. https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/lecture.
Colquhoun, Matt. “Appendix Two: ‘No More Miserable Mornings’ Tracklist.” In Postcapitalist Desire: The Final Lectures, edited by Matt Colquhoun, 217-220. London: Repeater Books, 2020.
Harney, Stefano and Fred Moten. The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning & Black Study. New York: Minor Compositions, 2013.
Sputnik, Charlie. DJ Techniques: Vinyl and Digital. Milwaukee: Hal Leonard, 2018.
Wark, McKenzie. Sensoria: Thinkers of the 21st Century. London: Verso, 2020.
Williams, Raymond. Marxism and Literature. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1977.
Chara Stergiou. “Music for Amphibious Populations.” YouTube video, 13:35. January 26, 2020. Accessed January 30, 2021. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SSVY4dFqI-I&feature=youtu.be.
Chara Stergiou.“Music for Logistical Populations.” YouTube video, 9:27. May 4, 2019. Accessed January 30, 2021. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o8Do0gcwyeg.
Stefano Harney. “Stefano Harney on Study.” YouTube video, 5:27. July 21, 2018. Accessed January 30, 2021. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uJzMi68Cfw0&t=1s.