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‘There Must Be a Poetry of Sound That None of Us Knows…’: Early British documentary film and the prefiguring of musique concrète

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 July 2017

Geoffrey Cox*
Affiliation:
Department of Music and Drama, Creative Arts Building, University of Huddersfield, Queensgate, Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, HD1 3DH
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Abstract

Standard histories of electronic music tend to trace the lineage of musique concrète as lying mainly in the Futurists’ declarations of the 1910s, through Cage’s ‘emancipation’ of noise in the 1930s, to Schaeffer’s work and codifications of the late 1940s and early 1950s. This article challenges this narrative by drawing attention to the work of filmmakers in the 1930s that foreshadowed the sound experiments of Pierre Schaeffer and thus offers an alternative history of their background. The main focus of the article is on the innovations within documentary film and specifically the sonic explorations in early British documentary that prefigured musique concrète, an area ignored by electronic music studies. The theoretical and philosophical underpinnings of the documentary movement’s members, particularly their leader John Grierson, will be compared with those of Pierre Schaeffer, and the important influence of Russian avant-garde filmmaking on the British (and musique concrète) will be addressed. Case studies will focus on the groundbreaking soundtracks of two films made by the General Post Office Film Unit that feature both practical and theoretical correspondences to Schaeffer: 6.30 Collection (1934) and Coal Face (1935). Parallels between the nature and use of technologies and how this affected creative outputs will also be discussed, as will the relationship of the British documentary movement’s practice and ideas to post-Schaefferian ‘anecdotal music’ and the work of Luc Ferrari.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2017 

1 INTRODUCTION

The making of links between differing artistic practices and aesthetics is a fundamental of creative practice. The notion of influence has been augmented in the latter half of the twentieth century by the more complex ideas inherent in post-modernism and intertextuality such that the very idea of originality has been questioned. In its attempt to examine precursors of musique concrèteFootnote 1 within the sonic experiments of the British documentary movement of the 1930s, this article does not try to trace influence, adhering instead to Richard S. James’s point that avant-garde sound-on-film techniques should ‘not be misconstrued to constitute an obligatory foundation upon which electro-acoustic music would eventually be based … [there is] no direct, antecedent-consequent relationship’. So the work of the British documentary movement did not lead to musique concrète, nor were such precursors deliberately ignored by Pierre Schaeffer, rather these ‘foreshadowings … serve to put electro-acoustic music into perspective as a natural outgrowth of basic trends and interests in twentieth-century music’ (James Reference James1986: 74, 89). In this sense, the foundation of my approach acknowledges links and ‘alternative histories’ on an intertextual level coming as they do from Barthes’s ‘innumerable centres of culture’ (Barthes Reference Barthes1977: 146) but existing as (relatively) parallel streams and linked as much by their use of technologies (and their limitations) as by conceptual thought and aesthetic product.

In the absence of much knowledge or experience of film or film sound, my own first attempt at composing a documentary soundtrack was based heavily on musique concrète, something very familiar to me as a composer and which seemed applicable to what a soundtrack made of location sound and interviews might consist of (all that was available for the project). Only later did I discover that similar ideas had been put into practice almost as soon as sound-on-film became possible in the late 1920s and had been further developed by the British documentary movement from 1934. I have since explored these ‘nodes’ of musique concrète, documentary sound, and the early British documentary movement both theoretically and in practice (e.g. Marley and Cox, 2001, Reference Marley and Cox2012). Specifically, it was the discovery of an actual crossing of paths of two main linking protagonists, Pierre Schaeffer, ‘inventor’ of musique concrète, and John Grierson, ‘father’ of the documentary movement, at Cannes in 1954 that has acted as a catalyst for this article.

2 LITERATURE REVIEW

2.1 Texts and key films

Discussion of the innovative use of sound in early film is relatively rare but it is by no means undocumented within electronic music histories and includes commentary on its relationship to later electroacoustic music. Richard S. James’s ‘Avant-Garde Sound-on-Film Techniques and Their Relationship to Electro-Acoustic Music’ (James Reference James1986) takes a fairly broad if brief view. More detailed are sections in Douglas Kahn’s Noise, Water, Meat (Douglas 1999), and Andrey Smirnov’s revelatory Sound in Z (Smirnov Reference Smirnov2013) contains highly detailed analyses of early–mid-twentieth-century Russian innovations. John Mackay’s account of Vertov’s Enthusiasm (1931), ‘Disorganized Noise: Enthusiasm and the Ear of the Collective’ (Mackay Reference Mackay2003) is also very informative. All of these make some references to techniques that foreshadow musique concrète.

Within such texts and with reference to the manipulation of location or studio-based recordings, several key films are usually mentioned: Weekend (Ruttmann 1930), Romance Sentimentale (Eisenstein and Alexandrov 1930), Enthusiasm (Vertov 1931), Philips-Radio (Ivens 1931), Deserter (Pudovkin 1933), Zéro de conduite (Vigo 1933) and Rapt (Hoérée 1934). From this list only Enthusiasm and Philips-Radio qualify as documentary in the Griersonian sense of it being an ‘instrument … of education and illumination’ (Grierson Reference Grierson1962: 4) enabled by a poetic ‘creative treatment of actuality’ (Grierson Reference Grierson1933a: 8) and with a filmic focus on ordinary working people. It is noticeable, however, that mention of the sonic innovations of the British documentary movement led by Grierson in the 1930s in pursuit of this goal, is absent. This is surprising given that films such as Song of Ceylon (Wright 1934), Weather Forecast (Spice 1934), Pet and Pott (Cavalcanti 1934), 6.30 Collection (Watt and Anstey 1934), Coal Face (Cavalcanti 1935), Night Mail (Watt 1936) and Listen to Britain (Jennings and McAllister 1942) amongst others all contain innovative and experimental use of sound material. Why British documentary should be ignored is unclear but one might suggest three contributory factors: the lack of appropriate equipment meant that none of these sound films were produced before 1934 (so too late for those privileging origination), their experimental nature is subsumed within a more-or-less socially purposive framework (so not avant-garde or abstract enough) and that there is no clear auteur to which they can be attributed (so not fulfilling the ‘great men of history’ hegemony). Even though he only actually directed one film, Drifters in 1929, if anyone can claim to be the ‘great man’ in the documentary story it is John Grierson due to his ‘multifaceted, innovative leadership’ (Ellis Reference Ellis2000: 365). He is credited with the first use of the term ‘documentary’ in the modern sense in 1926 (Barsam Reference Barsam1992: 81), led a team of filmmakers at the Empire Marketing Board Film Unit (1927–33) and then at the General Post Office Film Unit (1933–37) and has been called one of the great film teachers (Ellis Reference Ellis2000: 49). He was a charismatic figurehead, and though sometimes maligned, can lay claim to being ‘the person most responsible for the documentary film as English speakers have known it’ (ibid.: 363).

2.2 The opportunities for documentary

On a general level, the more open and fluid nature of documentary film as opposed to the imperative of continuity editing in narrative-driven fiction film

offered immense opportunity for collage … to rearrange fragments of the world … [T]he use of sound took many forms, often furthering the principles of collage through contrapuntal and non-synchronous forms … Grierson’s efforts to define documentary as an alternative to Hollywood … led him to encourage considerable experimentations with sound in the early 1930s. (Nichols Reference Nichols1996)

The leading lights in the British documentary movement are well-known within documentary film studies, where one does find substantive mention of their experiments in sound. A recent example is Carolyn Birdsall’s chapter ‘Resounding City Films’ in Holly Rogers’ edited collection Music and Sound in Documentary Film (Reference Birdsall2015: 21–40). The work of John Grierson, Harry Watt, Alberto Cavalcanti, Basil Wright, Edgar Anstey, Paul Rotha, Stuart Legg, Benjamin Britten, W. H. Auden, Humphrey Jennings et al. is well documented and in terms of discussion and analysis of sound that includes allusion or reference to musique concrète, Donald Mitchell (Reference Mitchell1981), John Corner (Reference Corner1996), Philip Reed (Reference Reed1999) and Anna Claydon (Reference Claydon2011) deserve specific mention.

3 GRIERSON AND SCHAEFFER AT CANNES

Just months before his death, in February 1972, Grierson gave an interview in which he made an intriguing statement that offers a direct link between the work of the British documentary movement of the early 1930s and Schaeffer’s work of the late 1940s and early 1950s:

Of course the French are always finding phrases and discovering terms for things but generally about ten years late, for example musique concrète. When that started appearing I was one day in Cannes invited, I think by Jean Cocteau, to hear this amazing new world of musique concrète, I laughed if I did not sneer because it’s something we’d all been playing with a long time before, maybe twelve years, something like ten years before. We’d Britten and all sorts involved. (Sussex, Reference Sussex1975a: 207)

The ‘one day in Cannes’ Grierson refers to was almost certainly in April 1954 when a ‘Music and Film’ exhibition was organised in conjunction with the seventh international film festival at Cannes by the International Music Council, an organisation founded in 1949 by UNESCO. The UNESCO-sponsored exhibition featured a discussion ‘devoted to new sound techniques in music and in particular to musique concrète, a new form of sound creation’ (Schaeffer, Reference Schaeffer1954: 18). Published in UNESCO’s The Courier journal, Schaeffer’s article (with unknown translator) heralded the exhibition at which he gave a lecture (Gayou Reference Gayou2007: 103), assisted by composer Maurice Blackburn (Hellégouarch Reference Hellégouarch2011: 5–6). Jean Cocteau was president of the Cannes Grand Jury in 1954 and Grierson was at the festival to present a film, Man of Africa (Frankel 1953) (Hardy Reference Hardy1979: 188). Grierson was an acquaintance of Cocteau and wrote about meeting him in a report on his visit to Cannes in 1953, the only other year Cocteau was president of the jury (Grierson Reference Grierson1953: G6.5.2). He also would have known Blackburn as a composer he employed for many of the early Film Board of Canada productions from 1941 (Hardy Reference Hardy1979: 118); Grierson was the first Film Commissioner of the Board, 1939–45, a post he took up after leaving the GPO Film Unit in 1937. Grierson was also briefly an official advisor to UNESCO director general on mass media and public information matters, 1947–48 (Ellis Reference Ellis2000: 229). Blackburn was in France in 1954–55 to spend time with Schaeffer’s Groupe de recherches de musique concrète at the Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française (Hellégouarch Reference Hellégouarch2011: 5–6). Cocteau himself knew Schaeffer and was familiar with his work on musique concrète from its inception in 1948 and is known for experimental work with concrete sound and music in his own films (Anderson Reference Anderson2015). So though Grierson’s memory of dates is suspect as the work with Britten and others he refers to is closer to twenty years prior to 1954, it seems clear that this is the event Grierson was thinking of. We are left with the intriguing possibility of him being introduced in person to Schaeffer, perhaps by Cocteau or Blackburn though this is speculation on my part.

The films Grierson alludes to in his interview must be Coal Face and Night Mail, the groundbreaking documentaries for which Benjamin Britten wrote scores and include spoken poetry written by Auden. I suspect he is also thinking of 6.30 Collection which features particularly innovative use of sound and was produced at the very start of the GPO Film Unit’s adoption of the medium; Grierson wrote about the sonic innovations in this film at the time (e.g. Grierson Reference Grierson1934b). Coal Face and 6.30 Collection will be discussed in due course but the background to what Nichols calls these ‘considerable experiments in sound’ in early British documentary must be addressed first.

4 BACKGROUND AND GENESIS

4.1 General influences

The Russians were a major influence on the fledgling British documentary movement. Many of the key Russian silent and early sound films of the 1920s and early 1930s were shown internally at the EMB (screenings initiated by Grierson as ‘texts for study’) and the London Film Society from 1927 onwards (Ellis Reference Ellis2000: 36–8, 42). Films such as Battleship Potemkin (Eisenstein 1925), Turksib (Turin 1929) and Earth (Dovzhenko 1930) were shown. Potemkin’s British premiere was part of a double bill also featuring the premiere of Drifters (Grierson Reference Grierson1929) at the London Film Society. Outside of the Russian influence, Nanook of the North (Flaherty 1922), Rien que les heures (Cavalcanti 1926) and Berlin: Symphony of a Great City (Ruttmann 1927) were all important and helped the movement synthesise a unique method of their own based on the naturalism of Flaherty, the allusive montage, social purposiveness and daring of the Russians, and the avant-garde and more formalist approaches of Cavalcanti and Ruttmann respectively.

4.2 Vertov and Enthusiasm

All these films are silent and it was Enthusiasm: Symphony of the Don Basin (Vertov 1931), a propaganda film about the Don coal miners’ attempts to fulfil their Five-Year Plan quota in just four years that offered the British documentary movement insight into the possibilities of the new technology. It was Vertov’s first sound film, and one of the first in which sound was recorded on location. In a review in the socialist newspaper The Clarion, Grierson is quite scathing of the film’s formalism and over long, directionless structure but nevertheless says that:

I have never set eyes on a film that interested me more, nor one that demanded more solid criticism … At the same time I must indicate some of the amazing things there are in this film. It is so full of ingenuities that practitioners like myself will be feeding on its carcass years from now. Never were workmen so energised by a camera … As I suggest it all leads nowhere, but it certainly leads furiously. Much of the same sort of thing can be said of the sound effects. You will find sound cut on beats to the beat of the image; you will find it syncopating with the images, you will find most excellent passings of melancholy sound into musical sound: you will hear it distorted till it screams, and you will find feeling in it. (Grierson Reference Grierson1931: 349)

Grierson’s words are prophetic indeed; not only is Enthusiasm available in a restored version on commercial DVD today and regarded as a seminal pioneering sound film, Mackay goes as far as to suggest that Schaeffer’s musique concrète owes its actual origins to Vertov (Mackay Reference Mackay2003: 2). There is certainly a link between Vertov and the Italian Futurists via Vertov’s knowledge of the work of photographer Rodchenko and the poems of Mayakovsky from 1916, themselves deeply influenced by Russolo’s The Art of Noises manifesto (1913). Marinetti’s visit to Moscow and the publication of Futurist texts in Russia from 1914 led to work such as Mayakovsky’s sound poem ‘Little Noises, Noises, Booms’ of 1914, derived from Russolo’s ideas (Kahn Reference Kahn1999: 139–40, 393). Grierson was also familiar with Rodchenko from the early 1920s via reviews in American periodical The Dial (Aitken Reference Aitken1990: 113) and he probably knew of the Futurists via his praise for the Vorticists, an English art movement derived from Russian and Italian futurism (ibid.: 62). In reviewing Gas in 1925, which had set designs by American vorticist Rudolph Weisenborn, he praised the noise-based music of the play as ‘torn from the babel of modern machinery’, concluding they ‘make an art a little worthy of turbines and dynamos’ (Grierson Reference Grierson1925: 11).

Vertov’s interest in sound thus predates his work in film and indeed led to it: ‘the kino eye was born of a keen but frustrated ear’. In his attempt to build a ‘Laboratory of Hearing’ in 1916 in which he wanted ‘to transcend the limits of ordinary music [he] decided that the concept of sound included all of the audible world’ (Kahn Reference Kahn1999: 139–40). Technological limitations at the time proved frustrating though and he remembered how one day in the spring of 1918

returning from a train station. There lingered in my ears the signs and rumble of the departing train … someone’s swearing … the puffing of the locomotive … whispers, cries, farewells … And thoughts while walking: I must get a piece of equipment that won’t describe, but will record, photograph these sounds. Otherwise it’s impossible to organize, edit them. They rush past, like time. (ibid.: 140)

Grierson’s praise for Vertov’s sonic ‘ingenuities’ in Enthusiasm therefore provides a link back to Futurism, a movement, however, that Schaeffer was always reluctant to acknowledge. He hardly mentions the Futurists in his 1952 publication for example and when he does mistakes Marinetti for Russolo (Schaeffer Reference Schaeffer2012: 88–9). He refers to them only once in his huge Treatise of 1966 and then only as the ‘Italian noise men’. Kahn asserts that neither Schaeffer nor Pierre Henry were aware of them at the time of their earlier work but were soon after, a fact criticised by Maurice Lamaître in the introduction to his 1954 edition of The Art of Noises (Kahn Reference Kahn1999: 138). There is little doubt, however, that intertextually the Futurists are a founding precursor of musique concrète

5 A POETRY OF SOUND

5.1 A new art

In the wake of the beginnings of sound film, the famous 1928 ‘Statement’ by Eisenstein, Pudovkin and Alexandrov (Eisenstein, Pudovkin and Alexandrov Reference Eisenstein, Pudovkin and Alexandrov1985: 83–85), and Pudovkin’s 1929 ‘Asynchronism as a Principle of Sound Film’ (Pudovkin Reference Pudovkin1935: 155–65) called for sound to be a new montage element that should be asynchronous with and act in counterpoint to the image rather than emphasising synchronous dialogue and ‘naturalism’. This was a huge influence on avant-garde film and early documentary and Grierson wrote about this specifically in a review of Pudovkin’s Deserter, a film that attempts to demonstrate these principles (Grierson Reference Grierson1933b: 782). With reference to this article’s title and with clear parallels to Vertov’s statement above, Grierson had already said in 1930 that:

There must be a poetry of sound which none of us knows … Meanings in footsteps, voices in trees, and woods of the day and night everywhere. There must be massed choruses of sound in the factory and in the street and among all men alive … I know not the first thing about them, though I have, like everybody else shut my eyes … and sat for hours trying to make something of the door-bangings and footfalls and crazy oddments of conversation that broke the plush darkness of a London night. We are the tyros, all of us, with a new world opening up on the horizon. I see no reason why anyone at the moment should envy Columbus. (Grierson Reference Grierson1930: 13)

Grierson wrote other similar articles in the early 1930s as well as giving public lectures such as those to the Department of Adult Education at Leicester University (Grierson Reference Grierson1934a: G3.10).

5.2 Technical limitations and correspondences

The film units Grierson led first at the EMB and then at the GPO did not get any sound equipment until 1934 and when they did it was of a relatively poor quality that marred and hampered subsequent output. As Enticknap points out, the optical sound cameras bought by the GPO (using the Visatone-Marconi system) had by 1934 already been dismissed as inferior to the industry standards set by, for example, the American RCA system. The system was bought primarily because it was cheap. Signal to noise ratios were poor and according to Watt the system only allowed the mixing of up to two channels in post-production compared to five or six in systems used in commercial cinema (Enticknap Reference Enticknap2011: 196). Editing capacity was very crude and portability limited, making location recording difficult. The resulting technical shortcomings in films such as 6.30 Collection and Coal Face are all too obvious but the limitations meant that the filmmakers made no attempt to ‘emulate the recording and mixing styles that had evolved and been enshrined in mainstream professional practice’ (ibid.: 197). The conventional methods of combining voices, noises and music did not or could not apply, leading to a distinctive and exploratory output. This is one of the main reasons why the films made by the GPO Unit during this early period have had such cultural significance and influence. One might make a similar argument about Schaeffer’s early reliance on turntables and direct-to-disc recording between 1948 and 1951 and the resulting works that he describes as being ‘discontinuous in style’ and sounding like ‘everything is hacked out with a billhook’ (Schaeffer Reference Schaeffer2012: 18). This description could easily apply to the soundtracks of the GPO films such that Schaeffer’s more ‘anecdotal’ early works such as Étude aux chemins de fer (1948) bear noticeable sonic similarities to, say, the latter stages of 6.30 Collection, even leaving aside the similar concerns with sound-source dissociation that will be addressed shortly.

In terms of actual techniques, as James has suggested, there are striking parallels between avant-garde sound-on-film work and electroacoustic music such that ‘methods for splicing, rearranging, altering, and reversing of sounds recorded on movie film have direct corollaries in electro-acoustic music in general and musique concrète in particular’ (James Reference James1986: 88). Grierson himself stated that ‘if your sounds are on film you can with a pair of scissors and a pot of paste join any single sound to another. You can orchestrate bits of pieces of sound as you please. You can also, by re-recording, put any single sound on top of another sound’ (Grierson Reference Grierson1934c: 102). This principle of sound montage is echoed by Schaeffer even before tape replaced disc recording when he describes musique concrète as being made of pre-existing elements, ‘taken from any sound material … then composed experimentally by direct montage’ (Schaeffer Reference Schaeffer2012: 25). I would suggest Schaeffer’s use of a term drawn from film editing is a conscious one and the parallels are even stronger once he began using tape: the ability to perform direct manipulation of sonic material drawn from the everyday world in the manner both he and Grierson suggest, almost by itself implies not only similarity of method but potentially of outcome too.

5.3 Sonic abstraction

As suggested, the technical limitations at the GPO often led to experiment with post-production sound as of necessity. This did not dampen sound’s enthusiastic adoption by filmmakers in the team, amongst whose company composer William Alwyn said ‘we had to rely on modest resources, which meant experiment, experiment and again experiment’ (Ellis Reference Ellis2000: 80). Similarly, Roger Manvell wrote that within the GPO unit, ‘experiment was the new watchword [that] acted like magic in the mid-thirties. You were just nowhere if the film you had just made or were planning was not an experiment in some way’ (ibid.: 83). In 1934, Basil Wright and critic B. Vivian Braun published their own ‘Manifesto: Dialogue on Sound’ (Wright and Braun Reference Wright and Braun1985: 97) obviously drawing on Eisenstein and Pudovkin:

W.: Music is abstract. V.B.: But music confines itself, very rightly, to noises produced by a limited number of special instruments. You are at liberty to orchestrate any sound in the world. W.: Once orchestrated they will become as abstract as music. Orchestrated abstract sound is the true compliment to film.

The idea of ‘orchestrating any sound in the world’ clearly relates to both Vertov’s and the Futurists’ proclamations. Similarly, the relationship between the idea that any sound, once ‘orchestrated’ will become as abstract as music, owes obvious kinship to Schaeffer’s notions of reduced listening and the sound object and his own desire to remove referentiality and what he calls the ‘anecdotal’ nature of everyday sounds that renders them ‘antimusical’ (Schaeffer Reference Schaeffer2012: 12). Edgar Anstey further comments:

we were recording noises of the bits of equipment [at the Central Telegraph Office] with the idea of using them … as a kind of musical score. Our first approach to sound was to use it in a kind of abstract way, in a mechanistic way … and try to take sounds and orchestrate them. Dialogue came much later … we were terrified of getting close to the theatre or literature. (Sussex Reference Sussex1975a: 46)

Similarly Harry Watt recalls that they were

more interested in sounds than in speech. We turned our ears to every machine, to every audible process, hoping to isolate sounds which would communicate the essence of our subject matter. We were not interested in recording dialogue or commentary (Ellis Reference Ellis2000: 87).

Again, both statements with their mention of abstract and mechanistic approaches and of isolating sounds are reminiscent of Schaefferian thinking and the eschewing of dialogue also finds a parallel: Schaeffer describes sounds where ‘meaning predominates’ and is the ‘main focus’ as being like ‘literature and not music’ (Schaeffer Reference Schaeffer2012: 13).

6 ALBERTO CAVALCANTI

Mention must be made here of Alberto Cavalcanti, Brazilian filmmaker and sound expert, employed by Grierson specifically to work on sound at their newly equipped studio in Blackheath in 1934. Cavalcanti had become bored with his commercial work in France that was heavily focused on dialogue and told Grierson he wanted to ‘experiment in sound’ (Sussex Reference Sussex1975a: 48), to which he replied he was welcome as his ‘boys knew nothing about sound’ (Sussex Reference Sussex1975b: 207). Cavalvanti’s credentials were impeccable in that he had been at the heart of French avant-garde film in the 1920s (his Rien que les heures, a cross between avant-garde film and documentary has already been cited as highly influential on the British crew) and had extensive experience in commercial early sound film comedies. Thus he had the professional expertise to help with the nascent skills of those working at the GPO as well as providing a ‘unique symbolic link between the avant-garde of the twenties and documentary of the thirties’ (Ellis Reference Ellis2000: 83). His first work was to help on 6.30 Collection (Miller Reference Miller2011: 9) and he had a key role in production, sound conception and editing for Coal Face (though not credited) and Night Mail amongst others. Anstey comments that:

It was not entirely because we seldom worked with synchronous equipment that we thought from the first in terms of the free use of sound. The slavish linking of sound with its actual corresponding picture seemed quite unnecessary … We had also in the mid-thirties, indeed the inspiration of Alberto Cavalcanti. (Ellis Reference Ellis2000: 88)

Basil Wright adds that ‘his ideas about sound were so liberating that they would liberate you in about a thousand other ideas’ (Sussex Reference Sussex1975b: 207). Harry Watt says simply that ‘I believe fundamentally that the arrival of Cavalcanti in the GPO film unit was the turning point of the British documentary’ (Sussex Reference Sussex1975a: 49). Cavalcanti himself wrote one of the more detailed accounts of sound in film in 1939 in which he advocates the ‘non-naturalistic’ use of sound and concludes that ‘the picture is the medium of statement, the sound is the medium of suggestion … [and] the most suggestive sound devices [music and noise] have been nonsync’ (Cavalcanti Reference Cavalcanti1985: 109–10). This idea had already been mooted in 1936 by Auden as a result of his work on Night Mail with Watt when he suggested that ‘the soundtrack holds the abstraction’ as a complement to the ‘definite’ nature of the image (Miller Reference Miller2011: 12–13), and was later echoed by Robert Bresson: ‘a sound always evokes an image; an image never evokes a sound’ (Burch Reference Burch1985 [1965]: 200).

I will now turn to two GPO Film Unit films as practical illustrations of the links and divergences between Schaffer’s ideas and the use of sound by the British documentary movement.

7 THE FILMS

7.1 6.30 Collection (1934, 15 mins) Dir.: Harry Watt and Edgar Anstey. Prod.: John Grierson

This straightforward film is about a London postal sorting office, structured around the arrival of the mail to its complete despatch. It is probably the first documentary made with entirely authentic location sound (Grierson Reference Grierson1934b: 217) though this sound is rarely, if ever, used truly synchronously. It offers both compositional and theoretical correspondences to Schaeffer’s approach. There is no traditional music as such in the film and the short title theme, though couched in a fairly conventional musical manner in terms of rhythm and melody, could almost be said to be pure musique concrète (at least in terms of its early incarnation), made up as it is from a kind of noise orchestra described by Grierson as consisting of:

One [film] rewinder (Legg), one trumpet, two typewriters (office staff), one empty beer bottle (blown for a ship’s siren), one projector (by the projectionist), some conversation, two pieces of sandpaper (Elton), the studio silence bell (myself), cymbals and triangle (Wright). Walter Leigh arranged and conducted. (Grierson Reference Grierson1934b: 216)

This brief opening music gives way to the sound of an unseen aeroplane flying over the capital, something Grierson alludes to thus:

another curious fact emerges once you start detaching sounds from their origins, and it is this. Your aeroplane noise may not become the image of an aeroplane but the image of distance or of height. Your steamer whistle may not become the image of a steamer but of isolation and darkness. (Grierson Reference Grierson1934c: 103)

Again, a parallel with musique concrète is apparent in this ‘detaching’ of sounds, though the signification Grierson suggests this engenders corresponds more to Schaffer’s comprendre listening mode than his preferred entendre, which bars all indicative listening.Footnote 2 In terms of the sonic make-up of the film we return to Anstey’s ‘ears’, turned ‘to every machine, to every audible process, hoping to isolate sounds which would communicate the essence [my italics] of our subject matter’. So sounds become isolated but as a result also symbolic.

7.1.1 Crossing of sound

In the latter half of the film the mailbags are seen being loaded into lorries and we hear the sound of engines and the men talking and whistling. There is then a cut back to the now empty sorting office and we see and hear a man sweeping up but the sound accompanying the sweeping changes to the sound of a steam train before we actually cut to the train image. This purely sonic but also metaphoric ‘crossing of sound’ as Grierson calls it (Grierson Reference Grierson1934b: 217) is very similar to the kind of technique Schaeffer attempted in order to rid sounds of their source-meaning by making purely timbral connections between them; the sounds of the sweeping brush and the puffing of the steam train have quite similar timbres and morphologies. However, in 6.30 Collection we do, at some point, see the brush sweep, the train and eventually the aeroplane mentioned earlier as ‘we cross the chorus of destinations across half the world’ (ibid.), that is, understand the implication that the mail is on its way to being delivered worldwide. At the same time we hear the previous sounds of the men talking and especially whistling so the threads of meaning are retained – these men (and their machines) helped in a crucial way to make this happen. As Grierson comments, sounds detached from their origins can be used as ‘images of those origins’ (Grierson Reference Grierson1934c: 103). A contemporary review of 6.30 Collection says its ‘glorious racket is orchestrated into a minor symphony of rush, bustle and efficiency’ (N.a. 1934: 61).

7.1.2 Anecdotal sound

There is an important distinction here that embraces the ‘annoying’ persistence of ‘anecdote’ and ‘drama’ in sounds that Schaeffer wanted to remove. This suggests more of an allegiance with Luc Ferarri’s ‘anecdotal music’ where the retaining of source-meaning in sounds is considered positively desirable. Ferrari had been working for Schaeffer at the GRM from the late 1950s but had become disillusioned with ‘bracketing off’ of sonic meaning from the sounds they were recording in the studio, treating them ‘as if they were notes’ (Caux Reference Caux2012: 129). Yet, as soon as he ‘walked out of the studio with the microphone and the tape recorder, the sounds [he] would capture came from another reality. That led to the unexpected discovery of the social’ (ibid.). Ferrari describes these sounds as offering another discourse that was linked to narrative and he termed their use in a musical context ‘anecdotal’, in defiance of Schaeffer’s attempt to eschew what he termed the anecdotal (ibid.: 130):

To incorporate the social within sound, to capture the voice of people talking in the street, the metro, the museum … we are like wandering ears stealing sound in the same way you would take a picture. That voice becomes a found object in the dramatic form. So that means incorporating society, intimacy or an expression of feelings. (Caux Reference Caux2012: 36)

This description echoes Grierson’s ‘poetry of sound’ of decades before as well as comments he made about the intimacy generated by recorded conversations in 6.30 Collection and how ‘eavesdropping … may yet be one of the pillars of our art’ (Grierson Reference Grierson1934b: 217). It also references Vertov’s idea of ‘photographing sound’ from even earlier and crucially allows for the social aspects of found sounds to be part of musique concrète. So whilst in contrast to Ferrari any social content or purpose seems absent from Schaeffer’s thinking, the Griersonian vision for documentary had always been strongly socially purposive. This relates to his philosophical idealism and belief in social reform through education and collective effort.Footnote 3 The idea that sonic societal elements can become found objects, potentially even sound objects in film, yet retain their social meaning, strongly corresponds with the sonic ethos of the documentary movement and can be directly applied to the way sound is used towards the end of 6.30 Collection. Ferrari concedes that his incorporation of the found object into music in the late 1950s had already been a technique used in film ‘for a while’ (Caux Reference Caux2012: 130). Thus, the malleable yet powerful source-bonding nature of sound is inherently recognised by Ferrari and Grierson and exploited, especially by the use of asynchronous sound. This echoes the statements of Cavalcanti, Auden and Bresson quoted above, as well as those of Boulez (see below) and Derrida who offered critiques on the virtual impossibility of Schaeffer’s phenomenology-based bracketing off of a sound’s source meaning.

7.2 Coal Face (1935, 12 mins). Dir., Sound dir. [uncredited]: Alberto Cavalcanti; Prod.: John Grierson. Music: Benjamin Britten. Verse [uncredited]: W. H. Auden

Coal Face offers different correspondences to musique concrète. Unlike 6.30 Collection no location recordings are used, the entire soundtrack being made up of Britten’s score and a voice-over. The score consists of piano and choir (singing mostly Auden’s words), and building on Walter Leigh’s example, a host of percussion instruments, household objects and other mechanical devices. Everything that is heard in the film forms part of Britten’s score (including the voice-over) and he was involved at a deep level in the structuring of the film (Reed Reference Reed1999). Publicity for the film described it as an ‘experiment in sound’ (Aitken Reference Aitken1990: 143) in which Cavalcanti had a major role and despite getting no official credit ‘cut the whole film completely’ and was responsible for ‘the whole conception of sound’ (Sussex Reference Sussex1975b: 206). It is a compilation film mostly made from pre-existing footage of coal mining. Its tone is ambiguous but ‘exceedingly searching’ and atmospherically dark throughout (London Reference London.1992 [1936]: 222), containing as it does an element of implied strong critique of the important but dangerous and controlling coal industry; the commentary points out, for example, that five men are killed every day in the coal industry in Britain.

7.2.1 Modernism

John Corner has dubbed the film’s dissonant and heavily percussive tones as ‘modernist realism’ (Corner Reference Corner1996: 60). The relationship of the documentary movement to modernism, a movement that incorporates musique concrète though also problematically,Footnote 4 is a complex one. For example, the formalist tendencies of the Russians and others were considered a powerful aesthetic vehicle for socially purposive art but viewed as ‘reaching for the moon’ (Grierson Reference Grierson1929: 13) when employed as an end in themselves. So modernism had a qualified influence stemming back to Grierson’s exploration of modernist writing and painting (e.g. Vorticism) via pages of The Dial and his reviews for the Chicago Evening Post in the 1920s (Aitken Reference Aitken1990: 113); members of the movement also had a general antipathy to romanticism (Ellis Reference Ellis2000: 91). The unsentimental and anti-romantic approach is a hallmark of the films, some of which certainly bear comparison to the abstraction of modernist creativity, which arguably reached its zenith in Coal Face. Britten himself described it at the time as ‘highly experimental stuff’ (Reed Reference Reed1999: 76).

7.2.2 Imagining musique concrète

The crucial aspects of Britten’s score that are relevant here are those that Mitchell describes as ‘imagining a kind of musique concrète’ and ‘musically conceived’ such that there is ‘none of the customary friction between the two worlds of sound – “noise” and music’ (Mitchell Reference Mitchell1981: 83). In other words, Britten’s score (which includes a reversed cymbal sound to represent the rapid transit of a train), features some of the most radical timbral experiments he would conduct. Claydon suggests Britten’s work at the GPO established him as ‘an explorer of musique concrète’ (Claydon Reference Claydon2011: 183). Britten uses the noise orchestra to mimic action on the screen, sometimes synchronously, though mostly more obliquely, but the invention in terms of the sheer sonic exploration and wide palate of timbres developed and used in trying to devise appropriate sounds certainly justifies the proto musique concrète tag. It corresponds to what Kahn says more generally about some 1930s film soundtracks, namely that, ‘one could sit in a movie theatre with one’s eyes closed and hear something similar to musique concrète’ (Kahn 2001: 139). The penultimate section of the film, indicated as X and X1a in the (unpublished) score and lasting about 2′30″, is most illustrative of Kahn’s notion since it features the noise orchestra exclusively, with no accompanying conventional music and with only sporadic and pithy voice-over informational fragments (Figures 15). It was composed last and in close collaboration with Cavalcanti (Reed Reference Reed1999: 76). The scenes depict the movement and use of coal in industrial settings. The ensemble in this section consists of (with visual correspondence): side drum, chains, sandpaper, whistles (shunting coal wagons), coconut shells (horse-drawn coal-carts), triangle, suspended cymbal, trip gear (electricity generator), bass drum, drills, sandpaper and whistle (locomotives), cup in a bucket of water, film rewinder, cymbals, bass drum, notched wood with wooden sticks, cardboard cylinder (ships), sheet metal struck with wooden mallet, gong, chains and whistle (factory scenes).

Figure 1 The first page of section X of Britten’s score for Coal Face followed by pages 181–184 (Figures 2–5). The voice-over is detailed in the first line of the score (complete with rhythmic notation) and the make up of the percussion ensemble at the bottom of page 1. The ‘Percussion’ line comprises more conventional instruments whilst the three lines of ‘Extra percussion’ form the noise ensemble. Required percussion or noise instrument changes are indicated by circled annotations (marked in red on the original). © Britten–Pears Foundation.

Figure 2

Figure 3

Figure 4

Figure 5

Writing in 1936, Kurt London describes Britten’s music as

transcending the score of musical notes and absorbs within itself the sound of real life (in a stylised form) whether it be of single voices, of choruses, or natural noises, by turning it to music and giving it rhythm … It is astonishing to observe how, with the most scanty material, using only a piano and a speaking chorus, he can make us dispense gladly with realistic sounds. (London 1992: 221–2)

London’s insightful description is testament to Britten and Cavalcanti’s creative skills in that these ‘natural sounds’ can almost be taken for realistic sounds (albeit surrogate ones that seem to exist in a surreal parallel world) but at the same time they are structured and orchestrated into music. London concludes that this approach makes a much stronger impression than conventional musical accompaniment and as a result the scoring of Britten (and Leigh) creates ‘universal representations of sound’.

8 CONCLUDING CORRESPONDENCES

8.1 Abstract or concrete music?

In his In Search of Concrete Music (2012), Schaeffer presents a version of the following diagram representing a ‘cycle’ of ‘abstract’ music (‘ordinary’, conceived in the mind, notated theoretically, executed in instrumental performance) and ‘concrete’ music (‘made up of pre-existing elements, taken from any sound material, noise or musical sound, then composed experimentally by direct montage’) (ibid.: 25):

Arrow 1 denotes the potential effect of experiments in concrete music in the imagination of a musician who is happy to use the traditional orchestra. Arrow number 2 represents the preliminary contributions made by classical methods to the composer of concrete music (ibid.: 28).

Britten’s score for Coal Face could be said to apply to either tendency – he uses traditional instruments (piano, voice and standard percussion) but is arguably ‘imagining a kind of musique concrète’ by augmenting them with a host of other noise-making objects; yet he uses classical methods (abstract conception, the score, conducting, a performance) in orchestrating those noises.Footnote 5 Schaeffer can be seen here to be less dogmatic about his notion of musique concrète than might be assumed. Indeed, he attempted the scoring and performance of a group of percussion instruments himself with the help of Gaston Litaize for Etude aux tourniquets (1948), though ultimately he rejected the method and ended up using recordings of the performance as raw materials for concrete manipulation for the ‘real Etude aux tourniquets’ (Schaeffer Reference Schaeffer2012: 16–17). Nevertheless, Tristram Cary has outlined a four-stage continuum of musique concrète compositional methods, ranging from the use of random found objects to ‘scored prepared sounds’ (Cary Reference Cary1992: 117), suggesting the notion is far from alien to its realisation.

8.2 Filmmakers were first

Though as mentioned Schaeffer has been criticised for not acknowledging his precursors in the field of pure music, he has shown more acceptance of the contribution of film sound. Indeed, to finish I will return to the 1954 Film and Music exhibition at Cannes which Grierson was rather disparaging about by asserting that what it demonstrated was ‘something we’d been all playing with a long time before’. Perhaps he would have been less critical had known that in The Courier article written as a precursor to the conference, Schaeffer said in the final section headed ‘Film makers were first’, that:

As for the cinema, it might well be said that this is the sort of music it has been dreaming of for years. Filmmakers did not wait for us before producing noises in the soundtrack that could convey more than any cello could do.

And in describing the use of sound in A Man Walks in the City (Pagliero 1951) that:

By prolonged repetition a succession of street noises, suggestive enough of itself, is made into a ‘sound phrase’. This phrase never loses touch with reality, yet it is detached from it, like the theme of a symphony. In this way Orson Wells, Bunuel and many others have for years successfully sketched out their own natural concrete music (Schaeffer Reference Schaeffer1954: 20).

The idea of the sound phrase, never losing touch with reality, yet detached from it could very easily have been written by John Grierson twenty years earlier and can be applied directly to soundtracks of the British documentary movement of the 1930s.

Acknowledgements

I would like to acknowledge the help of Dr Maria Castro in research relating to IMC and the Cannes 1954 Film and Music conference.

Footnotes

1 The original French for this term is used in this article except when referencing North and Dack’s English edition of Schaeffer’s A la recherché de musique concrète (2012) and his 1954 article with unknown translator. These translations use ‘concrete music’.

2 Derrida has criticised Husserl’s phenomenology upon which Schaffer’s entendre mode is based for ignoring the fact that indicative signification is inescapably inherent in all ‘empirical existents in the world’ (Kane Reference Kane2007: 18).

3 The importance of philosophical idealism to Grierson’s thinking and practice stemming from his university study of Hegel and others is crucial to his exploration of the aesthetic for social purposes in documentary and explains the movement’s embracing of more avant-garde practices to that end (Aitken Reference Aitken1990). Grierson’s approach is idealistic and essentialist and based on the concept of an underlying transcendental reality, drawing a ‘distinction between the real and the phenomenal’ (ibid.: 119). Grierson privileges the notion of an abstract, ‘poetic reality which existed beneath the rational’ (114). This chimes with Schaeffer’s adherence to the Husserlian phenomenological critique of empirical realism and his desire for the sound object to be ‘an objective yet ideal entity’; the sound object becomes a ‘specific essence’, ‘transcendent to perception’ and essentialist in nature (Kane Reference Kane2007: 15–17). So, Grierson and Schaeffer’s philosophical background is linked by an idealist and essentialist underpinning that profoundly infected both their approaches.

4 Boulez described it in 1958 as ‘execrable … a musical flea market’ in part due to the inevitable residual signification of the sounds used. It did not therefore adhere to the complete determinism of serialism as its composers were not in proper control of their material so were ‘amateurs, as abject as they are penurious’ (Boulez Reference Boulez1991: 226–7).

5 A correspondence might also be drawn here to the soundworld and practice of Helmut Lachenmann’s musique concrète instrumentale developed during the 1960s, whereby the score instructs acoustic instruments to be played in unusual ways so ‘those qualities, such as timbre, volume, dynamics or duration, do not produce sounds for their own sake, but describe or denote the concrete situation’ (de Assis Reference de Assis2012: 5).

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Figure 0

Figure 1 The first page of section X of Britten’s score for Coal Face followed by pages 181–184 (Figures 2–5). The voice-over is detailed in the first line of the score (complete with rhythmic notation) and the make up of the percussion ensemble at the bottom of page 1. The ‘Percussion’ line comprises more conventional instruments whilst the three lines of ‘Extra percussion’ form the noise ensemble. Required percussion or noise instrument changes are indicated by circled annotations (marked in red on the original). © Britten–Pears Foundation.

Figure 1

Figure 2

Figure 2

Figure 3

Figure 3

Figure 4

Figure 4

Figure 5