Futurism & Dada Reviewed
(LTM)
emusic
by Simon Reynolds
by Simon Reynolds
This
compilation is a time capsule from early Twentieth Century Europe, when the
continent swarmed with -isms: not just famous ones such as Cubism and
Constructivism, but nutty lesser-knowns like the Nunists and Rayonists too.
Although they differed on the precise details, these manifesto-brandishing
movements typically called for an utter overhaul of established ideas of art,
arguing that Western Civilisation, enervated and sagging into decadence, needed
an invigorating injection of barbarian iconoclasm to renew itself. The material
from the Italian Futurists on this anthology overlaps somewhat with LTM’s Musica Futurista
collection, but includes a much longer version of “Risveglio di una Citta,” a
symphony of scrapes and whirs woven by Luigi Russolo, the movement’s chief
musical theoretician and coiner of the enduring buzz-concept “the art of
noises.” His brother Antonio’s “Chorale” sounds like a conventional classical
overture, except there’s this roar of turbulence that intermittently rears up,
as though’s there’s a gale raging outside the concert hall. Wyndham Lewis,
British futurist sympathizer and leader of his very own -ism Vorticism, recites
a poem that once probably seemed audaciously “free” with its run-on stanzas,
but now positively creaks with starchy quaintness. The Dadaist material,
however, retains a good portion of its originally scandalous shock of the new.
On the noise-poem “L’Amiral Cherche Une Maison A Louer”, Tristan Tzara, Marcel
Janco and Richard Huelsenbeck unleash a polyphonic babble of multilingual
nonsense, punctuated with circus-clown irruptions of rude noise, enough to get your blood
boiling with excitement almost a century later. Huelsenbeck also contributes a
great reminiscence of the genesis of Dada, incongruously backed with a Indian
raga drone. Kurt Schwitters’ life-long work-in-process “Die Sonate in
Urlauten”, captured for posterity in 1938, is a tour de force of phonetic
poetry, peppering your ears with flurries of phonemes and scattering
consonants like confetti around your head. It’s oddly reassuring that works by
the Socialist-leaning Dadaists have aged far better than the efforts of the
Futurists, Mussolini fans almost to a man.
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