Sunday 29 March 2015

5.

This blog is three books in the process of being written, in the form of initial drafts of the sections, posted in the intended order, a project for which the overall name is Explorations. The three books are a continuation from Hidden Valleys: Haunted by the Future (Zero Books - 2015), and also from On Vanishing Land, an audio-essay made by myself and Mark Fisher (released by Hyperdub/Flatlines on 26th July, 2019 - https://hyperdub.net).


Explorations: Zone Horizon  (1 - 18)

Explorations: The Second Sphere of Action   (19 - 30)

Explorations: Through the Forest, the River  (31 - 49) 




  


    There was something “contingent,” or maybe serendipitous and ephemerally-singular, about both of my starting-points that evening in relation to music and dreamings. Afterwards I would never go back, in any important sense, to either of these starting-points.

    If you bring a will to see the transcendental to speed, then speed will always take you to the point where you see it, and this can take place using oneiric and philosophical lenses that subsequently may well turn out to have, overall, only a relatively limited value in relation to this escape toward the abstract perception of the outside (all sorts of confusions can arise as a result of attributing the quality of the outcome to the music or fictional world that was a component in reaching the outside, although somehow on this occasion no confusion occurred afterwards).

    Initially that evening I took speed, in several quite large "intakes", intermittently over the space of several hours (I don’t think I had any fixed plan at all at the beginning to also take LSD), and the two external sources of inspiration that I initially chose (again without having had any plan at all) were not only more than adequate as starting-points, but were perhaps even well suited for the circumstances.

      With music I started by listening to a tape of REM’s Automatic for the People which I had “randomly” bought in a supermarket two days before (I didn’t really know REM apart from having heard one or two singles). In a process of zoning in toward dreamings and music at the highest available level of intensity three or four hours later (which is like a day when you are on speed) I would head outward and onward to The Beatles, having tried a few other records first. But at the beginning I listened to Automatic for the People, whose title I associated with the idea of automatic writing (this probably assisting me in the process of hearing beyond it into the outside – the outside which I was feeling as having helped to create it, as opposed to it being a message from a group of musicians).

     There is a lot of melancholy in REM, and melancholy as such is a kind of affectation – it is not the same as processes of giving a lucid expression to the background radiation of sadness of the world (for these processes he sadness is one more stimulus to break free toward the south-outside – “all those who have gone down in the fight would want you to Escape”). But the speed ensured that I was not going to be caught up in the melancholy, and that pre-eminently I was going to focus on the direction of the Love-and-Freedom that also exists within the world. Rapidly, I began listening to two tracks in particular – The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonight, and Find the River. The chorus of the first of these tracks, which is by far the most up-tempo track on the album, I heard as both a wild shout of joy (which it is) and also as an entranced, tender love-song (which I “achieved” by a mis-hearing of the very slurred lyric as “coming in to waken her”).

      I had already reached a state of extraordinary joy – a joy that was charged with an energy that would intrinsically by-pass all forms of neurotic (energy-wasting) thinking and behaviour, and a joy that was suffused with the feeling of being in love. This feeling was arriving from the dreamed/superimposed image that now went across the chorus from the REM song, and it was also arriving from the encounter, only a few hours before, with the woman in Leamington. And furthermore it was arriving through a heightened connection that had now been established to the south-outside (because women are a primary aspect of the south-outside the affective quality of this connection could only be that of being in love, although it should immediately be added that the planet in the deepest sense is also an inspirer of love – an “object” of love). 

          Some of the time at this stage – when I was not sitting reading – I was dancing, in the form of simple torso-rotation, back-and-forward, and side-to-side movements. In general, and specifically with the The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonight, the movements were fast, but some of the time they were mesmeric in the mode of a slower, swaying motion.  It is important to think of this dancing in terms of the trance-inducing power of swaying or smoothly "refraining" motions, and in terms of its tendency to attach my attention to the music, and to action, and to detach it from thought-processes that would have blocked the awakening of lucidity, of abstract perception. Overall, given that I did not have much ability at this time in relation to stopping internal dialogues, I had stumbled into a set of behaviours that was exemplary for the circumstances. Reading, listening to music and dancing were all ways of disabling my conventional, habituated thought-processes (ordinary-life thought processes that, unknown to me, insisted on the world being constructed as ordinary, even when they appeared to be deeply philosophical). Not only this, because I was deliberately setting out to see the world as energy, or as the body without organs – as something that was like a space of forms of music – my attention, freed up from neurosis, was also being given to the whole of the room, so that perception was a fourth element that was freeing me from constricted thought. The concentration on perception was vital – but it should be added that perhaps the most fundamental element was the dancing (which of course was inseparable from perception - and only in part because of the music – and was proprioceptive, a charged, blissful world of sensations of movement). The dancing at its different speeds, slow swaying, and smoothly fast ecstatic movements, was a distractor from dead thought that at the same time was more than this – it was an inducer and heightener of trance.

      What I dreamed “across the top” of the chorus of the Sindewinder Sleeps Tonight was a “small” and very beautiful envisaged world. The lyric “coming in to waken her” was a story of being in love with a woman who was asleep in my bed. There was an extraordinary tenderness and intensity about the love in this “dreaming.” The story was that of a new relationship, and it was suffused not only with a love and tenderness toward the sleeping woman, but with a sublime astonishment that the woman was actually asleep in my bed. And it had the authentic quality of the state at the beginning of being intensely in love when the thought of having sex, although intensely wonderful, and a source of the beauty of the experience, can have the sense of it slightly – concupiscently – missing the point of the place (the place of lovers) that astoundingly has been found. This was there in the fact that the dream was not about having sex, and in the fact that the woman and myself might have had sex, or might not have done, and it was irrelevant whether we had – all that mattered was that we were in love, and we had slept together (the dreamed world specifically left open what had happened, very much including sex virtually within it, but emphasising the irrelevance of actual sex to the state of being in love by not pinning itself down with the inclusion of a corporeal sexual act).

     But it should be added that the difference between the song and what I was envisaging was not one created by a hallucination, but was due to the fact that amphetamines allow you to be extremely free and creative in relation to the emergence of dreamings. In fact I could hear that Michael Stipe was singing something different from “Coming in to waken her” but once I was internally singing this new lyric it was possible to be unaware of the discrepancy: and simultaneously the unequivocal feeling was that the joy I could hear in the chorus and the words that were audible meant that the words must mean something like what I had envisaged. So it was possible to make the high-tempo rush of the chorus into an invocation and blissful affirmation of the dream finding expression for me through the words “coming in to waken her”. Disjunctions of this kind while on speed are not the result of a lack of clear perception (the REM lyric has been described as one of the most mis-heard lyrics ever): on the contrary they are the result of a practical clarity which is clear in the sense that it is free of the neurosis of the need for correct interpretation. The joy of the music spoke for itself, and I created a virtual world on the basis of this joy, rather than worrying about the song's words.

     The two aspects that were fundamental about the other track were the idea of “the river” that must be found, and the fact that the song has a very beautiful, liltingly powerful melody. The lyrics have the quality of “improv” singing, rather than polished song-poetry: but although they contain a strand of affectation, and have an awkwardness in their construction, none of this matters in relation to the song containing a vital view toward the outside, a view which arrives inextricably from both the music and the words. At the time I was distantly aware of Michael Stipe's “sensitive soul” affectation, but none of that distracted me – even the bits that were wrong had another aspect which went in the right direction.

     And everything in the song is about directions. There is the road of trapped, constrained human existence, and then there is the river.

Me, my thoughts are flower strewn
Ocean storm, bayberry moon
I have got leave to find my way.

Watch the road and memorise
The life that pass before my eyes
Nothing is going my way.
   
I have got to find the river
Bergamot and vetiver
Run through my head and fall away.

The song begins with these lyrics:

Hey now, little speedyhead
The read on the speedmeter says
You have to go to task in the city

Where people drown and people serve
Don’t be shy, your just deserve
Is only just light years to go.

Although I was interested in the possible reference to amphetamines, in identifying with Michael Stipe – as I envisaged it – talking to a female lover, I did not feel inspired by the diminutive involved in “hey now, little speedyhead”. It did not seem to be something that would be said to someone with whom you were in love. Despite it apparently being morning in the song, I did not connect this “scene” with the world of “coming in to waken her.” But what was important in Find the River was that the love finding expression in the song was love for an aspect of the world – for Love-and-Freedom, and for wider realities – and the weakness of the emphasis in relation to amorous love was hugely compensated for by a relationship of love toward the planet. There is a quality of affectation in Stipe turning himself into a kind of Ophelia beside a stream  “There is nothing left to throw / of ginger, lemon, indigo / coriander stem and rose of hay” but the becoming-woman involved in the song is nothing but good, and together with this becoming-woman the names of the flowers, taken in themselves,  create an emphatic quality of an amorous, “letting-go” relationship toward the beauty of the planetary world in which we live.

     Other things were happening that were part of the process of Escape, but nonetheless it is correct to say that through the two songs - with the assistance of speed - I had reached the bright-transcendental (an additional point that should be made is that The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonight takes its title and opening musical phrase from the sublimely beautiful, and very charged song - from South Africa in 1939 - The Lion Sleeps Tonight). There was the river, and there was the jungle – in the background – of The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonight, together with the intense dream of being in love ("coming in to waken her"). Love and women are fundamental for the escape from constricted, collapsed reality; the forest is all around us, despite it being hard to see; and there is a river in the forest.

*

Almost immediately after starting listening to the music I decided to read a passage from a book – a passage which to a great extent is about music. But it was not a book about aesthetics and music. It was a fantasy-tale novel that I had not looked at for ten years, and that I had only ever read once (in the weeks before I had thought at some point that there was a section from it that I should look at, although in a way where I was thinking in terms of the cultural history of music in fantasy fiction).
    
    In the story Bracken, who is a "solver" of ancient underground labyrinths, is in love with Rebecca (who is a healer, using herbs to cure people) but as a result of epic - and recurrently very violent - events, he has been drawn far away from Rebecca, and his home, to the Uffington downlands, where there is a "holy" place - a community of male priests or monks, alongside a sacred neolithic site. 

    The book is Duncton Wood, by William Horwood, and its characters are moles. Given the book is in some sense a "magical tale" this starting point is not an issue - in fact the real issue is that it is not magical enough (it is a significant fact that although "the holy moles" of Uffington are alongside the 2500 year old white horse, this message-from-the-Future geoglyph is never mentioned, in favour of a central importance of the sarsen stone megaliths that are nearby). The book was written in 1978, taking advantage of the opportunity opened up by the much more impressive - and very shamanic - Watership Down, from 1972. And far from being shamanic it is an epic hero-adventure and conventional romance that is heavily inflected by a religious mysticism (influenced on one level by eastern philosophy) that fundamentally is catholicism, or anglo-catholicism. 

    The passage is three quarters of the way through the book (the events of the last quarter will take place primarily in North Wales) and up until this point the book has been set in woodlands and pasturelands of lowland Oxfordshire (as opposed to the south-Oxfordshire upland of the downs above the village of Uffington). A sacred song is about to be sung by the holy moles of of Uffington, in a secret chamber which is beneath the sarsen stone tomb that is now called Waylands Smithy (this name comes from 2000 years after the tomb was made). The location of the chamber for this song is connected to the fact that the moles worship a divine force which they call "the Stone" (all standing stones are sacred for them). Bracken has accompanied a "scribe-mole" called Boswell to Uffington but he is not a member of the Uffington religious order, and cannot take part in the singing of the song. He is at a loose end, and he goes out onto the surface:    

"The weather was cold, wet, and messy, as grey sweeps of rain came across the vales below Uffington and swirled up the hill into the long, coarse grass into which Bracken emerged from the tunnels below.  
 He did not know what he was looking for but, as often in the past, he knew he would find it when he got there.
Then he heard a familiar and welcoming sound, the rushing of wind through bare beech-tree branches and twigs somewhere ahead."

As I started to read this passage I became aware of a kind of anomalous parallelism between what I was reading and what was happening to me. The protagonist in the book did not know what he was looking for, and he was about to go into a secret place in which he would experience the transcendental through music, and specifically through song. And the feeling of the parallelism was emergent also from the fact that the protagonist not only had a love for travelling into the unknown, but was both intensely in love - with Rebecca – and intensely inspired by the terrains of the planet.
   Bracken finds the secret chamber, and finds an opening high up in one of its walls. He hears the song, and is swept away by it:

“…his own voice seemed to join them and he was singing it, too, and it carried him even further as its sound echoed and re-echoed around the chamber about him and took him finally for a moment into the very silence of the Stone, where a mole is nothing but a part of the glimmers and rays of the silence itself, unseen. As he went there, he understood at last where he had been with Rebecca and why he would always search until he found it with her once more.” 

   I was reading the words of the whole passage (about four pages) with the deliberate attention of someone reading them out - the opposite of “skimming.” The task I had set myself – without giving any thought to it - was to read the passage with full, deliberate intensity, waking every nuance of each phrase and each word. And it was not at all that I thought everything in the passage was a view toward the outside – on the contrary, along with its opening up of the transcendental I was deeply aware of a bleak space of religious gravity and “piety.” But at the same time my intent was now to follow the parallelism to the full, and in adjusting the lens of the fiction in this way, the combination of the music in the room, and the idea of the bright-transcendental in the book, however confused it was, led to my perception and abstract-perception crossing a threshold. And once across the threshold the world of Duncton Wood had disappeared, had become irrelevant in relation to the immediacy of what I was encountering.

    It was entirely – and viscerally – clear to me that I had reached what in anthropological terms is called the sacred. I was in a state of continuous extreme joy, or bliss, and I was perceiving the world around me both as a space of energy-formations that had the beauty and consistency  of music, and as a space within which the human world was transected by a river of the bliss that is love, freedom and lucidity (the bliss that I was experiencing was a part of this river). 

   The passage from Duncton Wood had helped me as an oneiric-abstract lens. I could also see, in putting down this lens, the grave, “pious-constrictive” flaws it had: the affectations of religion in Duncton Wood were as visible to me as the affectations of melancholy sensitivity in Automatic for the People, but in both cases these issues were irrelevant. I did not become ensnared in processes of critique which would have prevented me from seeing the south-outside (the critique took place, but in processes of abstract perception that instantly expressed themselves as a moving on).



    What everything evidently turned around was the relationship of women to the sacred. And here the book I was reading both pointed out the fundamental direction, and simultaneously provided almost nothing that would help me to move forward. It had within it a female figure who was an effective, believable figure for envisaging the state of being in love, but it did this in a context of character-aspects and circumstances that together were libidinally and metaphysically repugnant. It is obviously relevant that all of the priests of this world were males, but the deeper issue is that the ambient male-religion impositionism – with its affectations in the form of what is called “piety” – surrounds a carefully constructed female figure whose love, vitality, beauty and capacity to be an adventurer are in every sense shackled to her being a partner to a male, and to her being a mother and a healer (the three aspects of the “nurturing” female). She is not allowed in any way to be a thinker who is waking lucidity in a metaphysical exploration (only males here can be spiritual thinkers) and nor is she allowed to be an adventurer whose journeys are a blissful exploration into the unknown (again, here only males begin to go in that direction - and they only begin, trapped by the delusions of an entrapment-metaphysics).

   In the male world of religious metaphysics (which is what has created the religions) what has mattered fundamentally in the creation of religions has all along been the ownership of the land, and the ownership of women. Secretly the questions of gods and of avatars primarily pertain to justificatory metaphysical ruses that ensure the continuation of systems of libidinal, oneiric and concrete domination - domination of women, and of planetary terrains. It is not that the sacred – the bliss that is Love-and-Freedom – does not exist (the fact that it exists explains, in part, why women can be trapped in this way): it is that the systems of religion allow only tiny gleams of the energy of Love-and-Freedom to break through, while at the same time they intrinsically shut down the ability to escape towards it.

     We were going in opposite directions. Duncton Wood was imposing anglo-catholicism over the ancient shamanic world of Britain. The adventure of the story was like a young male’s glory dreams of being in love, being a hero, and being on a titanic adventurous quest, but most damagingly the book was a space of "piety," and of the abstract-oneiric functioning of the interiority (the interiority, or trans-establishment, in Britain is profoundly anglo-catholic). 

     In relation to the treatment of women, and to the bleak gravity and constriction of religion, my critique was a swift moving on. Yes, music and silence were door-openers for reaching the bright-transcendental, and yes, women were central to the escape, but the male-dominated priest-piety was evidently a destructive imposition, and so was the romantic traditionalism of the book’s female paragon.

   But where did the book lead me in relation to the planet? Here, it was not so much that I stopped to perform a critique, as that something in Duncton Wood’s relationship to the countryside of Britain caused me to see a form of creative engagement that I had not fully perceived before: a form of creative engagement that was in fact liminally - but deeply - connected to the interiority.

     The book constructed a kind of evaluative and abstract map of terrains, determining zones not according to spatial features, but according to aesthetic-religious aspects. It was oneiric-abstract work engaging closely with the terrains of the island. Rural lowland Oxfordshire was a zone of quietly sublime areas of woodland, and the chalk downlands at the far south of the county were a place of a more powerful, insistent sublime affect, a place where the sacred was closer to the surface. And lastly, the mountains of north Wales (the place to which the three central characters go, after the events at Uffington) is a place where the sublime is very intense, but darkly turbulent, in that it has both an ambient associated bleakness and a singular primevally dark element (the hound of Gelert, a creature which, like the medieval “imps” is initially negative in nature, but which can be “turned” so that it becomes a force of good). This particular form of mapping did not strike any chord with me in the sense that everything was tied to religion (and having spent two years – relatively recently - living in the exceptionally beautiful terrain around Harlech in North Wales, I did not agree at all with the map in relation to north Wales).

    But at another level the book was about the plants, trees  and hill formations of the island of Britain (it is full of references to plants) and there is a real love in this. Here was the element that in itself was fully positive.

    I was leaving Duncton Wood behind, but something, briefly, was carried with me from it. By this time it was around a half hour since I had taken a tab of LSD, and the carried-forward element would soon be swept away completely by the awakening of other zones of awareness, but for now there was a glimpse of something. In leaving behind the deep underground chamber of the priest moles, what was I now seeing? Or who? .

    I was seeing someone else, explicitly alongside the philosopher. This figure was the poet or prose-poet of the countryside - a figure whose work was about transmitting a love for the planet, although in a way where (and this distinction was not in focus) recurrently the love could be mediated by the terminology of the territory (so that by implication it is "the land" - the specific "land - that is evoked rather than the work evoking the planet by means of the region).

    I had an image of an extremely beautiful area of hills, at twilight (they were somewhere on the Welsh borders, in Shropshire, Cheshire, or over the border in the northern areas of Wales that are beyond these counties). And suddenly I had an intense yearning to be such a prose-poet or poet (I think it was prose that was in my mind), and the intensity of the dream was strong partly because I envisaged that such a writer would be living with an amazing woman, with them living in an area of hills - or beautiful countryside - for which they would both feel a profound love.

    I did not see that such a figure, if they have no centrally deterritorialised aspect, is in fact all along a very high-kudos equivalent of the "state philosopher" - their work can be taken up and used by the interiority (Shakespeare to a great extent - an extent that is fundamental when properly perceived - gets around this by setting two of his most powerful - shamanic-modernist - works in places other than Britain - A Midsummer Night Dream is in Athens, and The Tempest is Far away in the Caribbean, or most convincingly, in the "east Indies", as they were called at that time (the presence of chess in the play is an indicator of India, the place of origin of the game).
   
    But although I was struck by this figure, I did not stay. I remember that at a certain point I suddenly had a glimpse of a sunlit expanse of Warwickshire countryside - as if seen from a hill - and as well as the hills and woodlands there were several tall black "lines" of energy (they were as wide as several houses) that stretched up from the ground - like static plasma lines, lines of plasma, but ones that stayed constant instead of instantly disappearing - and went out of sight into the upper atmosphere. The affect was that they were like the night - like a starlit, moonlit night - and were dark only in the sense that what was there was too unknown for me to see it other than as a darkness. This was of course a deterritorialised, planetary "vision" of one of the terrains of the island, and it swept away the residual bad air of the line of thought that had continued from Duncton Wood.



     In relation to music by this time I had dropped back thirty years from 1992, and this new music had a far clearer view toward the Future, a view which - it is a view from 1962 and 1963 - had probably been assisted by the use of amphetamines. I was now listening to the early Beatles.

     This was the highpoint of sheer sustained bliss. The songs were love songs. They had an exuberant brightness, a delicately intense feeling of love (“I want to hold your hand”), the becoming-woman that is an affect of genuine heterosexual male love songs (how can you not enter into becoming with those who you really love?) and a lack of male affectation in the form of “soulfulness.” I listened to (and danced to) each song three or four times, and then moved on to the next one.

     And for a moment at least, in another space of the body without organs of the room, there was a sunlit, sublime-eerie expanse of planetary Warwickshire.


     And the LSD was now beginning to have an effect – there was a new joy in the form of extraordinarily beautiful coloured patterns that now were appearing “in front of” the surfaces of the room, and which suffused my visual field if I closed my eyes. And it was not just a question of the visual as a “source” for the patterns. With my eyes closed it was clear the patterns were suffusing my whole perceptual and proprioceptive field – the body-shaped eye that I had been all along – and it was more easy to focus on the fact that a large proportion of the patterns were to some degree expressively related to the songs to which I was listening.   

  The night was about to enter a new phase, and one that would involve some very anomalous experiences, and some extreme psychological turbulence (to state again what I said in the previous section – I am emphatically not recommending that anyone should follow this example). 






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