For a year
now I’ve been sitting on a set of field recordings which I made in August of
2017 around the London borough of Kensington and Chelsea. The project they were
destined for was conceived as a response to the Grenfell fire which had taken
place two months earlier. The idea I had was to produce a "sound
portrait" which would highlight the range of different environments and
economic conditions in the borough, which is often thought of as simply a rich
and prosperous place, filled with museums, giant Georgian and Victorian
terraces and trendy shops. In fact, Kensington and Chelsea while containing
some of the richest people and most expensive property in Europe also has some
of the most deprived wards in the UK. This disparity became a rallying point in
the aftermath of the tragedy and continues to influence the terms in which it
is framed.
That this
project has barely got off the ground is a matter of some regret, as the
one-year anniversary of the fire came and went. Although I still intend to
develop the recordings, the project has thrown up some interesting issues with
the nature of such endeavours and the difficulties both of making distinct
recordings in an urban environment and of the notion of a sound portrait
itself. Also, as time has passed the feeling I had of a need to do something in
response to what occurred has given way to reflection. I’ve increasingly
questioned my aims and whether the project was capable of living up to my
intentions, which were to make some kind of contribution to the artistic and
literary responses to the tragedy. Nevertheless, I have nearly five hours of
recorded material which is sitting waiting to be worked on.
On two days
in August 2017 I walked pre-planned routes of ten miles snaking through the
borough from one corner to another. The routes were designed to present
opportunities for recording what I hoped would be distinctive or pertinent material.
Planning the routes presented the first challenge. Although I was familiar with
the geography of the area and had visited many of the sites I intended to record
at, I had never walked around the borough to this extent before and several of the
locations – notably those around North Kensington, where the tower was located
- were unfamiliar. I had to guess where might be a good place for recording and
hope that what I found there would generate material sufficient for
highlighting the varying character of the borough. In the case of the museum tunnel
at South Kensington or beneath the Westway in North Kensington I roughly knew
the soundscapes that would be present and kind of environment I’d have the chance
of recording. I had also marked out certain parks, estates, and streets where I
wished to make recordings, but I didn’t want to make the walks too
prescriptive, as if the perfect soundscape was just there waiting to be
gathered up.
One of the key
principles which I take from the work of Luc Ferrari is that the making of
field recordings should be open to an experience of what the Surrealists called
“The marvellous”. This is an encounter with something that leaps out of the
everyday flux of life, disrupting the normal process of signification and
opening up more poetic readings. In Surrealist literature encountering the
marvellous is often associated with walking unguided through cities and it was
something of this tradition that I wanted to capture in my walks through
Kensington and Chelsea. Invoking such a rupture in the day-to-day struck me as
essential in order to emphasis the harrowing nature of the fire itself, without
having recourse to direct testimony or some ham-fisted attempt to use sound to
hint at the horror of being in a burning building. In fact, I wanted that event,
and the tower – the shell of which had become an all too familiar sight in the
news media – to feature barely at all. This is one reason why I used the
working title ‘In the Shadow of Grenfell’ to signal that it was what lay in the
locality of the tower rather than the tower itself and its traumatised
community that was my subject. This also absolved me from having to confront
the horror of that night directly, which I in no way felt capable. Here I must
admit the truth of Theodor Adorno's claim that all middle class music is
fundamentally ambivalent.
My route on
the first day began at the South Western corner of the borough, where the A3220
turns North at Chelsea Embankment, and finished at Kensal Rise beyond the
borough’s Northern border. I had the idea of beginning recording at the river,
capturing the sounds of boats, the Thames lapping against the stone embankment,
cars in the distance. I would then venture into the World’s End Estate
hopefully to pick up the soundscape of the local community. In practice the
ambient noise of cars passing hurriedly down Chelsea Embankment swamped the
mix. The Thames is a surprisingly quiet river at Chelsea where boat traffic is
irregular. A small sewerage outflow provided a trickle of watery noise as it
dropped into the river but at low tide there was little of the evocative sound
of water against stone mixed with urban background noise that I had hoped for.
In the
estate I encountered another familiar problem with making recordings of this
type. The square around which some of the main residential buildings were
organised was nearly deserted apart from a group of men sitting outside a café.
One is faced with the desire to get close enough to pick up the murmur of their
chat without eavesdropping or disturbing them. Being noticed is always likely
to end up ruining a recording as the unwitting passer by attempts to question
why you’re wandering around their neighbourhood with a microphone. This
happened while I was sitting in the estate and as a result I have a crystal
clear recording of a Turkish man and his mates asking me whether I'd like to
interview them. Perhaps I should have taken up the offer?
As the day
wore on the sound of traffic and of the huge amount of building work going on
all around the borough began to grate on me. I started to conceive of a
composition made up entirely of industrial sounds emanating from the basements
of well-to-do addresses, punctuated by the occasional exclamation in Polish or
Hungarian. At Sloan square I offset the roar of Bentleys and Lamborghinis going
through the junction with the gushing of Gilbert Ledward’s Venus pouring water from
a conch shell into the fountain basin. Walking around the fountain I picked up
a few touristic conversations as well as local business people yammering into
their phones.
The urge to
find quieter locations drew me off the planned route and onto side streets
where row after row of elegant red brick apartment buildings sit alongside a
series of private garden squares. Many of these hark back to the late 18th
century and are accessible only by key holding residents of the multi-million-pound
properties which flank them. If one theme of my piece was to be the sense of
injustice felt by many at the levels of inequality in the borough then here was
one concrete historical precedent. The garden squares of Chelsea, Belgravia and
Knightsbridge are some of the few places of solace in an otherwise chaotic,
noise polluted area. It's as if the planners of the 18th century had
foresight that peace and quiet would be a commodity in modern Britain, so they
privatised it in advance. The recordings I made at Cadogan and Lennox gardens,
Egerton Crescent and Brompton square are replete with birdsong, crunching
leaves underfoot and a sense of auditory breathing room that was impossible to
find anywhere else besides the interior of St Luke’s Church Chelsea, where Charles
Dickens was married to Catherine Hogarth in 1836.
On the North
side of the church is a sports area where at the time of my visit local school
children were having a tennis lesson. This provided one of the most distinctive
recordings from the day, made all the better as the grounds were situated a
good distance from the road. On the South side of the church building the
original churchyard was filled with people relaxing in the late summer sun,
eating lunch or talking with friends. After a brief recording stop at South
Kensington station, braving the columns of school children on their way to the
Science and Natural History Museums I finally began moving North up towards
Holland Park and beyond it Notting Hill and North Kensington. My route for this
first day would take me through the park and up Portland Road which skirted the
residential complex where Grenfell tower sat.
I’d thought
long and hard about whether to make recordings around the location of the tower
itself. The last thing I wanted to do was to appear voyeuristic or to be
mawkishly appropriating other people’s grief. And indeed, locals had put up
signs around the site asking people not to take photographs. I elected not to
make a roving recording around the area, which in truth was remarkably quiet.
The one I did make was while sitting outside Kensington leisure centre. It
seemed a good place as it was shielded from the wind by the hoardings put up to
restrict access to the disaster site and as a result people milling around had
to pass close to where I was sitting, affording the opportunity to get some
snippets of voice which I was aware I had little of so far. A couple of minutes
after switching the recorder on, two young boys came out of the leisure centre
and sat next to me on the stone bench. They must only have been around eight or
nine years old. They talked absently about the blackened hulk of Grenfell tower
which loomed above us; one asking the other how it had happened and reacting
incredulously when his friend told him it may have been started by a fridge.
"But fridges are cold?!" he replied with impeccable logic. They moved
onto other topics, one saying he wanted to be a scientist when he grew up, the
other wanted to be Spiderman. It was a serendipitous conversation and the only
recording I picked up with a direct reference to the fire.
In truth,
making field recordings with old sub-optimal equipment over a whole day is
never ideal, especially when struggling to find subjects that rise out of the
fug of background traffic and construction noise. Much of the day had felt like
drudgery and I was finding it hard to imagine how I’d produce something distinctive
and in the semi-didactic way I’d hoped for with the recordings I’d made so far.
What could I add to my itinerary with a degree of sonic seasoning? The Carmelite
Monastery to the North or perhaps Wormwood Scrubs to the West? I decided to
collect some more obvious signifiers and made a couple of recordings at Latimer
Road tube station, capturing both the coming and going of trains and the
platform announcements which would serve to anchor the listener to the
locality. Then the marvellous arrived beneath the Westway.
The
pedestrianised area below the A40 flyover is about as Ballardian a place
imaginable. Indeed JG Ballard once said that the raised carriageways at White
City and Hammersmith leading out of London inspired many a page from his
automobile based stories, not least Concrete Island (1974) which tells the tale
of a latter day Robinson Crusoe marooned on hinterland between two dual
carriageways. After the fire the area directly beneath the flyover became a
make-shift community centre and gallery where locals can come to rest on any
number of assorted sofas, meet local activists and community workers and
contribute to the growing collection of tributes to the dead, political poetry,
murals, and expressions of hope and anger.
This was
undoubtedly a place where a great deal of emotion had been invested and where
the reality of the fire and by association the raison d'etre for my project was most starkly felt. I spent a few
minutes recording the dull rhythm of the cars passing along the concrete
overhead, but in fact it was the acoustics below the road that were more
interesting. Water dripped from some occluded overflow pipe high up on one of
the supporting pillars, the screeching of brakes and trundling of trolleys on
nearby Bramley road reverberated delightfully off the 1960s concrete,
punctuated by the voices of local kids. There was also a street piano. I'd
noticed it as I first passed through, then after making recordings at Latimer
road I returned to find an elderly man at the stool with an even more elderly
looking women in a wheelchair watching from the side. The piano was woefully
out of tune (they were collecting funds to have that fixed) and whatever pub
blues the gentleman was trying to conjure from his memory, it came out as a
series of broken, tuneless chords. I managed to record a little under four
minutes from about ten yards away; a rupture of vaguely melancholic, vaguely
comedic quality in what was otherwise a very sad and poignant place.
At the end
of day one I nursed a pint at a pub near Kensal Rise station while wiping the
accumulated London grime from my face. Although I had accrued some distinctive
material the question of the sound portrait and of the approach to composition
remained, just as it would do during the following year. There are numerous
possible approaches to the sound portrait, just as there are in the painted
portrait. Luc Ferrari talks nebulously about music as a zone of frictions;
between epochs, sensibilities and histories. In describing his sound portrait
of Madrid (L'Escalier Des Aveugles)
he emphasises the role of interpreters (typically for him, a series of young women)
who enter into a dialogue both with the "portraitist" and the space,
from which only material recorded there can be used in the "sketch".
This process would be repeated at each location, producing a series of short
stories. In truth Ferrari's work never truly approaches what we would consider
portraiture in the traditional sense of an attempt to represent a person or
place in another medium. In his case autobiography is always central in what he
calls the "mike-voice relationship" and even simply with the presence
of the author/composer/recordist. It is not for nothing that he termed his most
distinctive style utilizing field recordings "anecdotal music".
Of more
recent work in this area I've been taken with the collection by Katharina
Klement (Peripheries: Sound Portrait Belgrade, 2017) and especially Rafal
Kolacki's recordings made at the camp at Calais populated by refugees, known
colloquially as the Jungle (Hijra: Noise from the Jungle, 2016). Both these
works attempt a more documentary style with the author/recorder fading as much
as possible into the background. Kolacki's recordings in the camp capture the
variegated sounds of music - some pre-recorded, some played live - reflecting
the origins of the inhabitants there. Sudanese and Syrian styles are heard most
prominently alongside more domestic concerns and the voices of stressed
international aid workers. There is as far as I could tell no collage or
attempt at artifice in his work. Klement on the other hand deploys a
methodology both in the collecting of her recordings and in their composition.
Taking up the theme of peripheries she collected sets of field recordings by
walking the city in eight concentric circles, with her apartment at their
centre. These were composed as an eight channel mix for eight speakers with a
combination of processing and layering which accentuated particular elements,
environments or transitions within the places she visited.
My method of
walking routes of a set length owes much to her approach but I'm less convinced
that the significant intervention of studio techniques and a conscious narrativization
was appropriate for my project. What I feared was a loss of the realism I
wanted to achieve and with it some honesty. Another significant difference
between our methods is that Klement recorded some interviews with people from
the city, asking them questions about their experiences of the Belgrade
soundscape. This was something I had briefly considered but rejected on the
grounds that it would turn me into some kind of quasi-reporter and again would
bring me a bit too close to the central trauma of the events of June 14th 2017.
The second
day was thankfully cooler than the first and began in the drizzle at Kensal
Green Cemetery at the North Western corner of Kensington and Chelsea borough.
Nothing hugely exciting was seen or recorded here, though I did get a few moody
camera shots juxtaposing crumbling grave sculptures with the gas holders on the
horizon. These were added to a collection of photographs I took throughout both
walks. With the exception of the cemetery which sits on its Northern bank, the
Grand Union Canal marks the boundary between Kensington and the borough of
Brent. Long gone are its days of ferrying goods and materials from Northern
manufactories into London. The only traffic you're likely to see nowadays are
pleasure trippers swigging craft beer out on deck, or that unique breed of
London house boat dweller shifting their moorings every two weeks. It's wise to
keep one eye on the tow path as these once industrial thoroughfares have given
way to cyclists pelting down upon unsuspecting "peds". Despite the
cyclists, canals are a refuge wherever they are found. People walk more
leisurely, take in the sights either side and life generally seems to move at a
slower pace. I walked along the path, past the famous Trellick tower (another
Ballardian signifier) before hopping off at the borough's Eastern border with
Westminster. The sounds of passing boats and the honking of Canada Geese
beneath the road bridges were a welcome addition to my set of recordings, as
were tube and intercity trains passing through Westbourne Park station.
Now heading
south into Notting Hill the transition in affluence was marked. Portobello road
market has long surrendered to the tourist trade and in truth little was open
that morning. I really could have done with a good binaural
recording set-up as it would have been worth capturing the sounds of the
few shopkeepers and tourists doing their thing on either side of the road. Instead
I was reduced to poking my microphone cautiously towards areas of activity
while pretending to peruse the wares on offer. The second park visit was to the
Western edge of Kensington Gardens; home to a notorious family of benefit
claimants the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, known to their friends and Wills
and Kate. On this auspicious day the Duchess had made known via her agents in
the popular press that she was expecting her third child. This led to a scrum
of reporters from those parts of the globe who still cared (mostly North
America) to assemble at the gates of Kensington palace and speak reverentially
on the subject of morning sickness and speculate on possible names for the
expensive Royal sprog.
It was also
the twentieth anniversary of the death of Diana Princess of Wales and it seemed
many a foreign visitor had come to make pilgrimage and lay cringe worthy
messages at the palace gates. One that particularly struck me implored us to
remember that just as at Calvary three were crucified, so too on that fateful
night beneath the Seine did three lose their lives. The placard included
pictures of Diana, Dodi Fayed and their driver Henri Paul, with the princess at
the centre of the triumvirate in Christ's place. Such is the madness that the
late princess's memory still evokes among some sections of hardcore Royal
fetishists. These tributes to the long dead "Queen of Hearts" sat
uneasily with those I had seen for the victims of the Grenfell fire the
previous day. Would anyone be paying them such honours of memoria mei twenty years from now? The Diana
memorial garden (yes there is more!) gave me another vaguely marvellous slice
of audio in the form of a giant glockenspiel, which tuneless tinkling, animated
by day tripping kids, wafted through the topiary boundary to meet my
microphone.
I reflected on how I might complete the day's recordings while sitting by the ornamental pond at the centre of the Victoria and Albert museum, which, since the sun had appeared, was full of children squealing as they skipped through the fountains. I switched on the recorder, but a couple of men loudly talking shop to my right smeared what would otherwise have been a nice soundscape.
I'd given up the ghost regarding the construction
noise. Where I came across an interesting timbre of angle grinder or pneumatic
drill I took a couple of minutes recording. Nothing else appeared worthwhile
between South Kensington and my return to the river. I was at the centre of
Chelsea Embankment and now, with the tide fully in I clambered over a barrier
onto a steel platform that held a ladder down into the water. Carefully I
squatted down and activated my recording device. The Thames below the steel
grill of the platform slapped against the stone. But before I could collect all
that I wanted a wasp appeared a few centimetres from my nose. Startled I
dropped the recorder towards the water, only for it to be saved by the wire
connecting my monitoring headphones which miraculously did not come loose and
held it in mid-air. Gingerly I hoisted it back up. I took it as a sign to make haste
towards home and headed for Chelsea Bridge. Just before crossing I noticed a large
stone staircase leading down to the river with easy access and the
unmistakeable sound of waves licking against them. Finally I had the recording
I had wanted to complete my soundscape; the perfect auditory punctuation
nailing the listener to a place and a particular element.I reflected on how I might complete the day's recordings while sitting by the ornamental pond at the centre of the Victoria and Albert museum, which, since the sun had appeared, was full of children squealing as they skipped through the fountains. I switched on the recorder, but a couple of men loudly talking shop to my right smeared what would otherwise have been a nice soundscape.
As of writing it's been a year to the day since I completed the second of my walks. As the author Iain Sinclair (who knows a few things about walking in London) might say; such flâneuring about town can - if you're lucky - reveal occulted histories and provide new perspectives on otherwise familiar places. One way this can happen is by observing the transitions between locations; uncovering boundaries that we never knew existed. There may be no walls or guard posts between Portobello road and Latimer road, but they are worlds apart. Separated not just by affluence and social class but by a sense of integratedness with the beast that is boomtown London. Kensington and Chelsea borough is a place of exclusions. The rich behind their security gates and in their private garden squares and the poor, out of sight and out of mind; piled up on top of each other in death-trap buildings; deprived even of a means of escape. None of this happens by accident and it's been happening in London for centuries.
It remains
my intention to work on these recordings and to produce something worthwhile. I
hope the preceding recollections will function as an aide-memoire both for the
compositional process and to recall the great tragedy that inspired them.
Below is a fifteen minutes mix of some of the raw recordings taken over the two days.
Below is a fifteen minutes mix of some of the raw recordings taken over the two days.
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