Charlie Haden’s earplugs

IF 1 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Daniel Fishkin
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This paper also draws from extant models of disability studies to explore the concept of “deaf-gain” and how it may be transposed to the disorders from which Haden suffered. There are to-date many well-established accounts of the deaf experience in disability studies and in music scholarship. This paper offers insight to another cluster of hearing dysfunction, which not only suggests a new paradigm for imagining disability in music, but also revises the very concept of hearing as it is commonly understood.KEYWORDS: Tinnitusmisophoniahyperacusisjazzbassdisability studies Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Please begin by listening to Charlie Haden’s bass solo on Ornette Coleman’s “Law Years” from the Complete Science Fiction Sessions.2. This story has been repeated many times throughout Haden’s life, but is recalled in conversation with fellow bassist, Flea (Leigh Citation2006).3. In several of his obituaries, he stands aside his own reflection in his Plexiglas (The Telegraph Citation2014).4. A diligent reader will note that Haden’s etiology of tinnitus et al is non-canonical, and represents his own understanding of his condition, rather than a comprehensive medical definition. Though Haden conjectures his tinnitus may have emerged from playing near loud drummers for so many years, noise-induced hearing loss is just one possible cause for the symptom of tinnitus. I use the term hearing damage, however, to preserve the emotional impact of my subject’s experience of these conditions, without intending to further stigmatize disease.5. Elsewhere, Haden lectures his students, “We’ve been given special ears. It doesn’t make you better than anybody else, but you’re able to hear things other people don’t” (Smith Citation1997).6. Haden is not alone. Indeed, many musicians who describe their tinnitus simultaneously describe themselves— eg, their own way of hearing and their way of engaging with sound. I found Barbara Streisand discussing her tinnitus with a daytime show host “Q: What do you hear that I don’t hear? A: I hear high frequency noise. When I went to have my hearing tested, I had supersonic hearing. I hear more. […] And this is one of the reasons I always felt different when I was a kid (Streisand Citation2018, 0:24–0:41).7. In another interview, he admonishes his students, “you must risk your life for every note” (Gravity Citation1994).8. Pawel Jastreboff distinguished himself in the field by coming up with the first metric to test for tinnitus in the brains of rats – and later invented Tinnitus Retraining Therapy, a psychodynamic response system for learning to cope with tinnitus in lieu of a chemical or surgical cure (Jastreboff and Hazell Citation2008).9. Consider, too, microphone feedback – regardless its colloquial association as an “annoying” sound.10. And indeed, through focused listened onto one’s own troubled relationship to sound, that iterative process of attention-directing might yield a sound that cannot be unheard. In other words, Passive hearing, amplified by active listening, gives way to a new level of hearing.11. Edelstein et al. (Citation2013) authored one of the first papers to take a stab at creating diagnostic criteria for Misophonia through interviewing people who experience it. Edelstein et al. (Citation2013) also connect the data of misophonic sufferers to normal music listeners, creating data for the psychological experience of this puzzling condition.12. Whereas the lowercase spelling of deaf indicates the absence of hearing, capital-D Deaf indicates Deaf Culture – positing Deafness as a community rather than a condition.13. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT“Charlie Haden’s Earplugs” explores how tinnitus, hyperacusis and misophonia have shaped the musicality and sonic production of the jazz bassist and composer. While Haden maintained a negative attitude toward his hearing damage over the course of his long musical career, viewing it as a limitation and a source of difficulty, this paper brings together evidence to suggest that Haden’s condition also provided him a productive means to exert control over his sonic reality. In this way, these maligned conditions are part and parcel of Haden’s personal engagement with the world, and therefore, part of his creative process and distinct aesthetic. This analysis is accomplished by a forensic account of Haden’s listening particularities through his interviews, as well an analysis of his approach as an improvising partner. This paper also draws from extant models of disability studies to explore the concept of “deaf-gain” and how it may be transposed to the disorders from which Haden suffered. There are to-date many well-established accounts of the deaf experience in disability studies and in music scholarship. This paper offers insight to another cluster of hearing dysfunction, which not only suggests a new paradigm for imagining disability in music, but also revises the very concept of hearing as it is commonly understood.KEYWORDS: Tinnitusmisophoniahyperacusisjazzbassdisability studies Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Please begin by listening to Charlie Haden’s bass solo on Ornette Coleman’s “Law Years” from the Complete Science Fiction Sessions.2. This story has been repeated many times throughout Haden’s life, but is recalled in conversation with fellow bassist, Flea (Leigh Citation2006).3. In several of his obituaries, he stands aside his own reflection in his Plexiglas (The Telegraph Citation2014).4. A diligent reader will note that Haden’s etiology of tinnitus et al is non-canonical, and represents his own understanding of his condition, rather than a comprehensive medical definition. Though Haden conjectures his tinnitus may have emerged from playing near loud drummers for so many years, noise-induced hearing loss is just one possible cause for the symptom of tinnitus. I use the term hearing damage, however, to preserve the emotional impact of my subject’s experience of these conditions, without intending to further stigmatize disease.5. Elsewhere, Haden lectures his students, “We’ve been given special ears. It doesn’t make you better than anybody else, but you’re able to hear things other people don’t” (Smith Citation1997).6. Haden is not alone. Indeed, many musicians who describe their tinnitus simultaneously describe themselves— eg, their own way of hearing and their way of engaging with sound. I found Barbara Streisand discussing her tinnitus with a daytime show host “Q: What do you hear that I don’t hear? A: I hear high frequency noise. When I went to have my hearing tested, I had supersonic hearing. I hear more. […] And this is one of the reasons I always felt different when I was a kid (Streisand Citation2018, 0:24–0:41).7. In another interview, he admonishes his students, “you must risk your life for every note” (Gravity Citation1994).8. Pawel Jastreboff distinguished himself in the field by coming up with the first metric to test for tinnitus in the brains of rats – and later invented Tinnitus Retraining Therapy, a psychodynamic response system for learning to cope with tinnitus in lieu of a chemical or surgical cure (Jastreboff and Hazell Citation2008).9. Consider, too, microphone feedback – regardless its colloquial association as an “annoying” sound.10. And indeed, through focused listened onto one’s own troubled relationship to sound, that iterative process of attention-directing might yield a sound that cannot be unheard. In other words, Passive hearing, amplified by active listening, gives way to a new level of hearing.11. Edelstein et al. (Citation2013) authored one of the first papers to take a stab at creating diagnostic criteria for Misophonia through interviewing people who experience it. Edelstein et al. (Citation2013) also connect the data of misophonic sufferers to normal music listeners, creating data for the psychological experience of this puzzling condition.12. Whereas the lowercase spelling of deaf indicates the absence of hearing, capital-D Deaf indicates Deaf Culture – positing Deafness as a community rather than a condition.13. One of Jastreboff and Hazell’s Citation2008 most radical suggestions is to suggest a suicide help line specifically for tinnitus sufferers, to spare them from the affective drama of going to a doctor who will shrug and say “there’s nothing you can do.”14. It also suggests an aesthetics of hearing too much that refuses generalization. Since these conditions are all subjective, phenomenologically, there is something untranslatable about these disorders – something hyper-personal, which will, by virtue of their specificity, will never translate to a real cultural identity, such as Deafness has.
查理·哈登的耳塞
《查理·哈登的耳塞》探讨了耳鸣、听觉过敏和恐音症如何塑造了这位爵士贝斯手和作曲家的音乐性和声音创作。虽然在他漫长的音乐生涯中,哈登对他的听力损伤保持着消极的态度,将其视为一种限制和困难的来源,但本文汇集的证据表明,哈登的病情也为他提供了一种有效的手段来控制他的声音现实。通过这种方式,这些恶劣的条件是哈登个人与世界接触的重要组成部分,因此,也是他创作过程和独特美学的一部分。这一分析是通过对哈登的采访对他的倾听特点的法医描述,以及对他作为即兴合作伙伴的方法的分析来完成的。本文还从现有的残疾研究模型中探讨了“耳聋”的概念,以及如何将其转换为哈登所遭受的疾病。到目前为止,在残疾研究和音乐学术中,有许多关于聋人经历的成熟叙述。本文提供了另一组听力障碍的见解,这不仅提出了想象音乐残疾的新范式,而且还修改了通常理解的听力概念。关键词:耳鸣、恐音、耳鸣、爵士乐、残疾研究披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。请先听查理·哈登在《完整的科幻会议》中为奥内特·科尔曼演唱的《法律年》中的贝斯独奏。这个故事在哈登的一生中被重复了很多次,但在与贝斯手跳蚤的谈话中被回忆起来(Leigh Citation2006)。在他的几篇讣告中,他站在自己树脂玻璃上的倒影旁边(The Telegraph citation, 2014)。勤奋的读者会注意到,Haden对耳鸣等的病因学是非规范的,这代表了他对自己病情的理解,而不是一个全面的医学定义。虽然哈登推测他的耳鸣可能是因为多年来在吵闹的鼓手附近演奏而出现的,但噪音引起的听力损失只是耳鸣症状的一个可能原因。然而,我使用“听力损伤”这个术语,是为了保留我的研究对象在这些情况下经历的情感影响,而不是为了进一步污名化疾病。在其他地方,哈登教导他的学生,“我们被赋予了特殊的耳朵。这并不会让你比别人强,但你能听到别人听不到的东西”(史密斯引文1997)。哈登并不孤单。事实上,许多音乐家在描述他们的耳鸣的同时也描述了他们自己——例如,他们自己的听觉方式和他们与声音互动的方式。我发现芭芭拉·史翠珊(Barbara Streisand)和一个日间节目主持人讨论她的耳鸣,“问:你听到了什么我没有听到的?”A:我听到高频噪音。当我去做听力测试时,我的听力是超音速。我听到更多。[…]这也是我小时候总觉得自己与众不同的原因之一(史翠珊语录2018,0:24-0:41)。在另一次采访中,他告诫他的学生:“你们必须为每一个音符冒生命危险”(重力引文1994)。Pawel Jastreboff提出了第一个测试老鼠大脑中耳鸣的指标,并在该领域脱颖而出,后来发明了耳鸣再训练疗法,这是一种学习应对耳鸣的心理动力反应系统,代替了化学或手术治疗(Jastreboff和Hazell Citation2008)。再考虑一下麦克风的反馈——不管它在口语中与“烦人”的声音联系在一起。事实上,通过专注地倾听自己与声音的混乱关系,这种反复的注意力引导过程可能会产生一种不能被忽视的声音。换句话说,被动倾听被主动倾听放大后,会让位于一个新的听力水平。Edelstein等人(Citation2013)撰写了第一批尝试通过采访恐音症患者来创建诊断标准的论文之一。Edelstein等人(Citation2013)也将恐音症患者的数据与正常音乐听众的数据联系起来,为这种令人困惑的情况创造了心理体验的数据。小写的deaf表示没有听力,大写的d deaf表示聋人文化——把聋人看作是一个群体,而不是一种状况。Jastreboff和Hazell在《Citation2008》中提出的最激进的建议之一是建议为耳鸣患者专门设立一条自杀帮助热线,使他们免于去看医生时那种耸肩说“你无能为力”的情感戏剧。它还暗示了一种拒绝泛化的听得太多的美学。 由于这些情况都是主观的,在现象学上,这些障碍有一些不可翻译的东西——一些超个人的东西,由于它们的特殊性,永远不会转化为真正的文化身份,比如耳聋。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Senses & Society
Senses & Society HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: A heightened interest in the role of the senses in society has been sweeping the social sciences, supplanting older paradigms and challenging conventional theories of representation. Sensation is fundamental to our experience of the world. Shaped by culture, gender, and class, the senses mediate between mind and the body, idea and object, self and environment. The Senses & Society provides a crucial forum for the exploration of this vital new area of inquiry. Peer-reviewed and international, it brings together groundbreaking work in the humanities and social sciences and incorporates cutting-edge developments in art, design, and architecture. Every volume contains something for and about each of the senses, both singly and in all sorts of novel configurations.
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