Musical aesthetics below ground: volcanic action and the geosocial in Sigur Rós’s “Brennisteinn”

IF 0.4 Q3 CULTURAL STUDIES
Tore Størvold
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article presents a musicological and ecocritical close reading of the song “Brennisteinn” (“sulphur” or, literally, “burning rock”) by the acclaimed post-rock band Sigur Rós. The song—and its accompanying music video—features musical, lyrical, and audiovisual means of registering the turbulence of living in volcanic landscapes. My analysis of Sigur Rós’s music opens up a window into an Icelandic cultural history of inhabiting a risky Earth, a condition captured by anthropologist Gísli Pálsson’s concept of geosociality, which emerged from his ethnography in communities living with volcanoes. Geosociality allows for a “down to earth” perspective that accounts for the liveliness of the ground below our feet. Likewise, in Sigur Rós’s “Brennisteinn”, we encounter a musical imagination of the geologic that poses a challenge to hegemonic concepts of nature founded on notions of equilibrium and permanence. The article culminates with a consideration of what such a geologically minded aesthetics can offer us in the age of the Anthropocene.
地下音乐美学:Sigur Rós“Brennisteinn”中的火山作用和地理社会
摘要本文对广受赞誉的后摇滚乐队Sigur Rós的歌曲《Brennisteinn》(“硫磺”,字面意思是“燃烧的岩石”)进行了音乐学和生态批判的细读。这首歌及其伴随的音乐视频以音乐、抒情和视听的方式记录了火山景观中生活的动荡。我对Sigur Rós音乐的分析为了解冰岛居住在危险地球上的文化史打开了一扇窗户,人类学家Gísli Pálsson的地理社会性概念捕捉到了这种情况,这一概念源于他在火山社区的民族志。地理社会性允许一种“脚踏实地”的视角来解释我们脚下地面的生动。同样,在Sigur Rós的《Brennisteinn》中,我们遇到了对地质的音乐想象,这对建立在平衡和永恒概念基础上的霸权自然概念提出了挑战。这篇文章的结尾是对这样一种具有地质意识的美学在人类世时代能为我们提供什么的思考。
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
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
33.30%
发文量
15
审稿时长
14 weeks
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