The E-info Age Bookmix is a sound and video performance stitched together from two books — The Medium is the Massage (McLuhan/Agel/Fiore, 1967) and The Electric Information Age Book (Schnapp/Michaels, 2012) — and from materials that surround them: vintage recordings, notes, archival typescripts, television clips, jingles, rhythm tracks. On the centenary of Marshall McLuhan's birth, it brings the media theorist back to life to participate in a conversation between the live, the recorded and the printed; between the first cybernetic age and the digital present. It is the live, staged performance of The Masses' inaugural vinyl LP, The Electric Information Age Album.
The Electric Information Age Album
from the liner notes by Jeffrey T. Schnapp
On July 15, 1967, a vinyl proposition packaged in a dangling preposition was released into the world under the title of the book that inspired it. I'm talking about "the first spoken arts record you can dance to," issued by Columbia Records as an acoustical interface to the Jerome Agel and Quentin Fiore cut-and-paste Marshall McLuhan paperback primer The Medium is the Massage.
Sixties critics (Cameron aside) may have proved deaf. But The Masses have heard the call from the distant shore of another cybernetic age. Our reply takes the form of a vinyl bridge to The Medium is the Massage; a performed reading and reading performance of a book; an acoustical interface to TEIAB that we are calling The Electric Information Age Album (TEIAA).
What's the difference between this "second spoken arts record you can dance to" and its 1967 predecessor? For all its pop fizz, the latter dangles its propositions and prepositions, but seems to leave the body stumbling, fumbling for itself on the dance floor. In its labors of reworking, The Electric Information Age Album honors its predecessor while seeking to further advance its claims.
But, first, a question: how do you like it so far?
17 and 18 September 2012
The Masses: The E-info Age Bookmix
MiTo International Music Festival
Teatro Franco Parenti, Milan
22:00, Free admission
What's the difference between this "second spoken arts record you can dance to" and its 1967 predecessor? For all its pop fizz, the latter dangles its propositions and prepositions, but seems to leave the body stumbling, fumbling for itself on the dance floor. In its labors of reworking, The Electric Information Age Album honors its predecessor while seeking to further advance its claims