1. INTRODUCTION
While the author won’t die, we might begin to view authorship in a more conceptual way: perhaps the best authors of the future will be ones who can write the best programs with which to manipulate, parse and distribute language-based practices. Even if, as Bök claims, poetry in the future will be written by machines for other machines to read, there will be, for the foreseeable future, someone behind the curtain inventing those drones; so that even if literature is reducible to mere code—an intriguing idea—the smartest minds behind them will be considered our greatest authors. (Goldsmith Reference Golsmith2011: 11)
Sound studies in the Global South have been largely neglected, with a disproportionate focus on Western technologies and cultures. According to Feld (Reference Feld2018), 95 per cent of sound studies are dedicated to the West. Similarly, the study of live coding has been largely centred around European and American institutions, as evidenced by most publications on the topic in the conferences and reunions of New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME) (where live coding is a boosted practice) (Martinez et al. Reference Martinez Avila, Tragtenberg, Calegario, Cadavid Hinojosa, Corintha and Dannemann2022). Furthermore, in the West, sound has been conceptualised as a secularised autonomous object, isolated from other senses (Steingo and Sykes Reference Steingo, Sykes, Steingo and Sykes2019: 7) and individualised by the introduction of technological devices in the Western popular culture of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries (Großmann Reference Großmann, Bielefeldt, Dahmen and Großmann2008: 123). NIME, in particular, has been characterised by a technological fetishism that prioritises ‘cutting-edge technologies (such as maker processes, high performance computing, machine learning)’ (Morreale, Bin, McPherson, Stapleton and Wanderley Reference Morreale, Bin, McPherson, Stapleton and Wanderley2020: 162).Footnote 1 In addition, live coding faces both ‘internal’ and ‘external’ challenges. Internally, it is burdened by the colonial legacy of Western tonal notation. Externally, it is used as a tool to meet the needs of programmers in urban centres, while also affirming a cultural form that presupposes the complexity of algorithms and invisible machines. We will revisit each of these points in further detail.
For these reasons, this article aims to provide reflections on the state of sound and live coding in the Global South, drawing on the praxis of live coder composers from Latin America (LATAM). In addition, we will theoretically analyse the issues surrounding sound and live coding from three main, somewhat irreconcilable, currents, namely media theory, actor-network theory and system theory. We are following the recommendations put forward by auditory culture scholars, who suggest the integration of different approaches, including ‘Discourse analysis and media-theoretical … include systems theory … as well as approaches such as actor-network theory, the perspective of the dispositive’ (Großmann Reference Großmann, Schlüter and Volmar2015: 24) to reveal diverse problematics within the practice of live coding. Our aim is not to cherry-pick concepts to fit our arguments, but rather to demonstrate how different issues become visible through different theoretical lenses. For example, we can consider the categorisation of phonographic/cinematographic media, such as sound carriers and film, as a second-order media-technical orality, which both carries cultural memory and enables a modernised abstraction of personal transmission and local culture (Großmann Reference Großmann, Bielefeldt, Dahmen and Großmann2008: 124).
In our point of view, the differences between the musical practices of the folkloric Global South and the Global North are not simply a matter of distinct auditory cultures, but rather stem from fundamentally different constitutive logics. This is the fundamental point of whether we want a live coding that is only anti-colonialist or de-colonialist. In the first case, one’s own position would always be defined based on the counterpart, it would be a derivative logic as an ‘objective relation of borders’ (Laclau and Mouffe Reference Laclau and Mouffe1987: 221), and in the second case, not only would the ontological limits of the hegemonic part be rejected and would be shown as contingent, in which there ‘are not objective relations but a kind of relation in which the limits in the constitution of any objectivity are shown’ (Laclau Reference Laclau2006: 114) but also the elements of an new articulation practice should be completely new that imply extirpating the preceding logic in favour of a creatio exníhilo in which both parties are ‘reciprocal subversion of its contents’ (Laclau and Mouffe Reference Laclau and Mouffe1987: 221). That is the reason we should construct antagonisms or decolonialisms practices as ‘constitutive and not derivative’ logics (Laclau Reference Laclau2006: 104–5). Moreover, we can also ‘[interpret] the system theory in a Left-Luhmannian way’ (Mahnkopf Reference Mahnkopf2006: 212)Footnote 2 or not, but what matters is that we leverage complex theoretical approaches to question and comprehend how the Global North is attempting to impose a new logic based on more sophisticated dynamics in shaping the next society. In this respect, we will not delve into the similarities or incomparable differences among these theories. Rather, we aim to demonstrate that if we seek to criticise and find alternatives, we need to decolonise all aspects, including the signal, the sign, and the Sinn (meaning in English).Footnote 3
With the preceding objectives in mind, live coding is a very opportune object of study, although we understand live coding not as an object, but as an action ‘that people do’, in which also sociocultural, technological, psychological, physiological and cognitive boundary conditions count (Seibert Reference Seibert2016: 12). Live coding serves us as a probe to compare the way in which sound is theorised in the Global North and South. Live coding also allows to look ‘at how “global” technologies are localized’ (Steingo and Sykes Reference Steingo, Sykes, Steingo and Sykes2019: 14) in the South. We hold that there is no line of continuity between the use and praxis of the same technology and programming language in LATAM as in the West. It is therefore about constitutive logic and not derivative colonial logic. Which is the same as recognising the diversity of sonic ontologies (ibid.: 4) and the deco-ontologies of the political praxis of LATAM livecoder groups (Schulze Reference Schulze2020: 81).
2. DE-CONSTRUCTING LIVE CODING
Historically it is said that the origin of live coding can be traced to Cage’s contributions, since from then on objects began to be transformed into instruments, which laid the foundations for collective sound and subcultures such as circuit bending and live coding, which consolidated ‘DIY (do-it-yourself), DIWO (do-it-with-others), and DIT (do-it-together)’ (Salter and Saunier Reference Salter, Saunier, Groth and Schulze2020: 417).Footnote 4 The main connection that can be traced in Cage’s works is the exploration of new instrumental possibilities of objects and the foundation of the ‘scientific-technological-aesthetic hybridity’ era, in which he was one of the pioneers. These distinctions between object, inventor and artist, as well as between the social and technical aspects, are blurred by Cage’s works. These distinctions will be accentuated even more with live coding, which blurs the composition, instrument and performance distinction (ibid.: 427; Magnusson Reference Magnusson2019: 182).
Thus, live coding was originated in the centre of modernity at the end of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first century as a scientific and interdisciplinary artistic project per se, since it produces music programmed with positions or paradigms of computer science: in which there is a nest between mixed binary machine (the computer) with the symbolic artistic human (Gerloff Reference Gerloff, Fabian and Ismaiel-Wendt2018: 64a). Likewise, live coding belongs to a medial musical practice (as opposed to non-medial ones) (Großmann Reference Großmann, Rusch and Schmidt1997: 231), because it could be conceptualised as an instrument, as the input of the ‘activity of writing [parts of] a program while it runs’ (Salter and Saunier Reference Salter, Saunier, Groth and Schulze2020: 427) and can create and redefine the instruments at the same time they are played (Magnusson Reference Magnusson2019: 245) but also function as a media where the data and information are collected, reproduced and transmitted.
On the other hand, in LATAM, the history of live coding can be traced to the opening of centres such as the Altos Estudios (CLAEM) at the Instituto Torcuato Di Tella (ITDT) in Argentina and to the work of pioneering musicians in the field, such as the Colombian Jaqueline Nova,Footnote 5 who sensed that all the sounds of the world would come from the machines, just like Gilles Deleuze and Friedrich Kittler admired synthesisers as a post-structuralist machine (Großmann Reference Großmann, Schlüter and Volmar2015:17).Footnote 6
3. DECOLONING THE SIGN
At this point we would like to introduce the political side of live coding that could be overlooked at least generally and explain the political differences between the Global North and the Global South. For example, it is mentioned that live coding in Germany contributes to the consolidation of a technical culture of the urban centres and their increasing need of a supply of programmers (Gerloff Reference Gerloff, Fabian and Ismaiel-Wendt2018: 65a). In this sense the introduction of live coding in the artistic medium functions as a creativity dispositive (Estrada and Agudo Reference Estrada and Agudo2011: 47), particularly conceived as a creative economy (Gerloff Reference Gerloff, Fabian and Ismaiel-Wendt2018: 65b). So, an affective-perceptual is added to programming languages to integrate it into contemporary digital culture and thus introduce it to commercial social-individual nexus (ibid.: 79a–79b). According to Gerloff, the central objective behind promoting live coding is to conceal the reality that, in practice, programming activity is encouraged primarily to meet the growing demand for skilled workforce in this field, while the discourse emphasizes the artistic aspect of it. As we will see further in the LATAM live coders section, we would partially agree with this.
However, this hypothesis its true in general in the Global North and probably is a way to introduce culturally the programmers by the art system, that is, to introduce the personal figure (and expectations) of the programmer in the society through a creative device within the economic context of creative cities so they are no longer seen as the misunderstood nerds that no one invites to parties (ibid.: 65a). This is something that we agree with but it should at least be nuanced in the case of live coding in LATAM. Regularly in LATAM, the states in the periphery of modernityFootnote 7 cannot even apply the legal abstract code, since the political one predominates, which is blurred in patron/client relationships (Luhmann Reference Luhmann2009: 25: Zamorano Reference Zamorano Farías2010: 918). The law seen from this perspective works from the stabilisation of expectations using the legal/non-legal code that is coupled with the political system (Zamorano Reference Zamorano Farías2016: 310). The problem is that, for example, in Mexico this code is traversed by a series of intermediary institutions such as the figure of the caciques, who are local bosses who ‘control the town’ and ‘caciques … incite [illegally] violence and the disruption of everyday life’ (Boyer Reference Boyer2019: 24, 90). It is more challenging for them to introduce government dispositive in the Foucauldian sense, that is, in relation to governmentality, which is a power relationship form between an institutional framework and subjectivities, through which subjects could ‘govern themselves’ and therefore become governable. This way of exercising power is more subtle and suggests ‘to structure the possible field of action of others’ (Foucault Reference Foucault and Faubion2002: 341).
That is why it is more likely to find sonic manifestations, where ‘logics of superfluity and abandonment’ (Steingo and Sykes Reference Steingo, Sykes, Steingo and Sykes2019: 16) of bare life (homo sacer as Agamben also calls it (Laclau Reference Laclau2008: 110)) and neo-colonial logic predominate, in which cruder extractivist social formations can be traced than in the centre, where, for example, ‘rivers become spaces of contestation against forms of dispossession and epistemic violence’ (Blackmore and Gómez Reference Blackmore and Gómez2020: 7). In this sense, for the study of live coding in LATAM, more complex contexts must be considered, where different logics predominate and in which social agents may be ‘neither subject to direct rule nor recognised as full members of the states’ system’ (Hindess Reference Hindess, Hansen and Stepputat2005: 246).
Live coders on the periphery of modernity are not focused on using the latest cutting-edge technology (Martinez Avila et al. Reference Martinez Avila, Tragtenberg, Calegario, Cadavid Hinojosa, Corintha and Dannemann2022: 26). Instead, they intentionally seek out old hardware to repair and repurpose in order to avoid having to purchase new equipment due to limited financial resources. Live coding in LATAM is an act of activism, protest and criticism, seeking to ‘materialize some still imaginary constellation of an implex into actual social progress’ (Schulze Reference Schulze2020: 53).
4. DECOLONING THE SINN
Live coding functions as a creative dispositive that introduces us to forms of order where the composition of elements from increasingly heterogeneous origins is promoted. One of the main points of the system theory is that societies look for cultural forms to face the surplus of meaning (Sinn) provoked by the introduction of a new diffusion media. We need to be cautious because we are discussing the diffusion of communication, not in a technical or material sense as we will do later. Moreover, media are initially used for storing or supporting society’s memory before they are employed as communication diffusion media (such as the Bible’s original intention, which the church could not prevent people from reading other materials and comparing them).Footnote 8 Additionally, the art system has the possibility to experiment with uncertainty in a way that other subsystems cannot afford for their selves (Baecker Reference Baecker2007: 88). Following this perspective, art is the only type of communication media that could break the normal world references of meaning (Sinn) to force it as something possible inside the world (Luhmann Reference Luhmann2019: 244). Art function is a type of pivot that simultaneously opens a manyfold of distinctions that are offered to partake in this perception instantly but then is closed in the further communication of the perception as it must follow a sequential order.Footnote 9
However, the big difference between the past media introduction in society and the introduction of digitalisation, algorithms and in general calculator machines is that the meaning could be elaborated by these machines, and not anymore only ‘by people who speak, write, print, send and post’ (Baecker Reference Baecker2018: 20). Although it is not clear who exactly is trying to communicate something, or who is writing and who is reading, it is almost impossible to control who the message reaches, under what conditions and with what type of information. The main point of this perspective is that the next society or the network society which ‘by itself: combines things, people and moments that have nothing to do with each other’ (ibid.: 70) finds a temporary form that consists of a diverse heterogeneity of elements in which the form of synchronisation is the ‘disintegration and recomposition of all the elements involved’ (ibid.: 83). Live coding as an artistic practice also exploits this form since the building complexity and the self-modification of the programs and algo-rythms designed to this end challenge the meaning dimensions and blows up the object/ subject distinction, now that, for example, the Neumann logical Betablocker computation ‘can be viewed as a companion for live coding that one has the opportunity to get to know, collaborate with, and – sometimes – work against’ (Bovermann and Griffiths Reference Bovermann and Griffiths2014: 59). This means that live coding not only achieves perceptual heterogeneity as an artistic practice, as discussed earlier with regard to sound perceptions, but also relates a diversity of heterogeneous elements.
Sally-Jane Norman mentions that live coding is comparable to live action programs or real-time arts, which could be thought of as performances too (Norman Reference Norman2016:118). However, according to some authors, live coding is beyond performative practice, from public performative rehearsals, collective improvisations, or individual explorations of sound as a scientific method (Bovermann and Griffiths Reference Bovermann and Griffiths2014: 40). We think that live coding goes beyond performative practices in live action because it uses different times. The time of the computers that transcend bodily-social ones, that is, computational time, since even live coding works on a ‘false simultaneity’ in which time is treated as data (Villaseñor Reference Villaseñor Ramírez2017: 74). What is relevant is not the separation of times, since what makes live coding relevant is how it interacts with social time simultaneously (e.g., when a concert is delayed because the times of the machines do not coincide or because they cannot control a program, and all that remains is to turn off the machine), different to the time of the body – of how quickly the bodily memory of the shortcuts or of the written programming can react to what is heard, the built-in memory (Magnusson Reference Magnusson2019: 10). The intertwining of these times (machinistic, physiological, psychic and social) is what makes live coding particularly different from any performative practice such as the theatrical one to which Sally-Jane Norman refers.
Finally, this fascination for invisible machines and displays (Luhmann Reference Luhmann1997: 304) is comparable only to the surface of divinatory signals, in that what remains divine are the invisible intentions and the ornamental surface of the deep motivational conditions of art (Baecker Reference Baecker2018: 20). Live coding must therefore question whether the idea of ‘complexity’ as the cultural form of the next society (ibid.: 69) is the only one, and how implementing this kind of technopoiesis legitimises, stabilises and supports a social behaviour that functions only as long as it is not subject to inquiry (ibid.: 57). And in this regard, we cannot deny that this practice has attracted a lot of attention since the digitalisation of society has extended into all social areas: ‘digitization in the broader sense of the word … is the development and testing of countable and calculable data in the medium of analog contradiction’ (ibid.: 59).Footnote 10
5. DECOLONING THE SIGNAL
On the other hand, according to the actor-network theory, live coding could be understood as inscription in the sense of material Quasi-Objekte (Luhmann Reference Luhmann1995: 81–2), which function as glue holding communication, norms and social institutions together, and not vice versa. According to Latour, ‘scientific fact is the product of average, ordinary people and settings, linked to one another by no special norms or communication forms, but who work with inscription devices’ (Latour Reference Latour, Knorr, Cetina and Mulkay1983: 162); for him, the technology of inscribing is the principal cause of the possibility of the ‘cognitive’ (ibid.) self. In our case, this would mean not only the process of programming, executing and in general coding for sound/musical purposes or within the modern conceptuality of musical abstractions (musicological/ethnomusicological/sociological, including what we are doing now), but also the epistemic possibilities of the artefact’s materiality. This way of seeing live coding as a Quasi-Objekte with capacity of non-human agency not only means that it could (and would) transform into a musical instrument itself (Großmann Reference Großmann and Saxer2016: 382–3), but also that it can be seen as an epistemic artefact. This epistemic particularity is exemplified by Magnusson when he talks about the bone flute, in which a subtle theory of pitch organisation is made material (Magnusson Reference Magnusson2019: 4–5). It is worth mentioning that non-human agency is not opposed to human agency, as human agency is also material and not just cultural/discursive. The idea of speaking of non-human agency is not only to attribute agency capacity to extra-human actors but also ‘to rethink the notion of agency, and to understand the agential practices through which the human and the nonhuman are differentially constituted’ (Barad Reference Barad2007: 445–6). On the other hand, ‘there is no consensus on non-humans’ (Ihde Reference Ihde2004: 104–5), although at this point, we refer more to the notion of non-human as a group of associations in which there are a greater number of translations and enrolment of its human and non-human elements (Latour Reference Latour2001: 234). In relation to live coding, the ability of non-humans to behave more as mediators than intermediaries is of interest (Latour Reference Latour2008: 63). This characteristic of epistemic artefact opportunely highlighted by Magnusson would let us trace how the tonal system permeates many recording and reproduction media, including digital ones. Not only, for example, that the microphones which are supposed to recreate human hearing (since they function similarly to the eardrum in relation to the vibrations caused in its membrane) were created and tested only with the male voice,Footnote 11 but also that historically all these devices have sought to recreate, imitate and emulate the tonal system inherited from the European culture of musical notation. Thus, for example, melography, in the case of the coded rolls for the automata player, is an adaptation of the ‘tone arrangements’ (Großmann Reference Großmann, Schürmer, Haberer and Brautschek2022: 86). Similarly, the shaving of phonographic vibrations into bits in the ‘arbitrary code’ of a MIDI data also emulates the Western tonal system.Footnote 12 One of the problems of the MIDI protocol is that it divides all sound phenomena into 127 and does not support microtonality,Footnote 13 which represents a very large reduction in sound complexity and excludes many non-Western genres. This scheme of tonal thinking also permeates Artificial Intelligence (AI); for example, the AIVA project, which is an ‘Artificial Intelligence Virtual Artist’ as well as a commercial project. However, the problem with this project is that ‘AIVA does not hear sounds but reads notes or files in MIDI format or in similar formats in which tones are described as events in note parameters’ (ibid.: 88).
The same can be said about digital audio workstation (DAW) programs created by softsynth designers, sample content creators, and audio tool creators from the West that reproduce this tonal system. This situation was very clear for Kittler, who argues that classical music depended on an aesthetic based on and dependent on a specific media and material form (Haffke Reference Haffke2019: 4). Although for him, any artefact that reproduces discrete values, regardless of whether they are phonemes (e.g., typewriter letters as a programmatic binary language), represents the other of the noise, of the jam. However, we argue that in some cases, if live coding is conscious and avoids reproducing the Western culture or tonal system, it has the possibility of creating from this notion of Klitterian noise (ibid.: 26). As for the persistence of this ballast in live coding, we will discuss this further in the next section.
6. LATAM LIVE CODER’S DECOLONIAL PRAXIS-THEORY OF SOUND
We must also decolonise music/sound theory in general. We should not only think of sound in terms of waves, since it is related to and arises from the notion of energy, which was developed in its beginnings in physics by its petroculture. Footnote 14 When sound is studied in science, it is automatically related to the movement of a wave (Holland Reference Holland2018: 1). When some physicists think about energy, they relate it to the ability to do something and the possibility of reproducing that work (Pielou Reference Pielou2001: 1). Footnote 15 The relationship of sound in terms of waves with petroculture may seem counterintuitive, but in physical terms, waves are also energy that is transmitted as ‘local pressure changes in a medium (usually air)’ (ibid.: 188) and energy is defined as work in a circular concept: ‘work requires the expenditure of energy, and energy spent performs work’ (ibid.: 5). And despite the fact that the energy in the form of acoustic waves in physical terms is usually the residual energy or waste energy of a kinetic energy interchange (as in the case of hammering a nail, most of the energy is transferred from the hammer to the nail until the friction stops it and the sound remaining is a physical effect of that action; ibid.: 189) and cannot be exploited so effectively as other kind of energy sources, the notion of wave as energy indeed is a ballast of the worldview of petroculture.
In this sense, sound must be thought of beyond its physical qualities. This is so also because, on the one hand, sound can not only be thought of as the ‘energy of any noise … proportional to the squares of the heights’ (ibid.: 190) that are dissipated in a physical medium, but sound can and should also be thought of beyond its physical properties as something that, in fact, does not dissipate but ‘as a kind of connective tissue, a socio-sonic accumulation’ (Steingo and Sykes Reference Steingo, Sykes, Steingo and Sykes2019: 16).
As we have shown, in order to decolonise sound theory, at least the relevance of pitch within sound must be removed now that the idea of sound as music is related to ‘the dictatorship of notation culture’ (Großmann Reference Großmann, Bielefeldt, Dahmen and Großmann2008: 123) and represents exercises of power and ‘cosmogonic listening’ according to live coder composer Laura Zapata (personal communication, 6 March 2021). In fact, Sonic Pi, although an open-source project programmatic environment for live coders, uses presets loaded with European musical tradition, both rhythmical and tonal (Gerloff Reference Gerloff, Fabian and Ismaiel-Wendt2018: 79a).Footnote 16 Presets in the strict sense were a factory pre-configuration, the default of various technical artefacts (Meerhoff Reference Meerhoff, Fabian and Ismaiel-Wendt2018: 137a). Later, at the end of the 1980s, the ‘preset’ loses its sense of being simply a technical name and becomes impregnated with human, semiotic and cultural intentions. Thus, for example, preset 49 that indicates the ‘detroit techno’ of a groovebox display is not just a number but is loaded with ‘a series of prejudices and rules that are also associated with this word, which has been supposed to denote a genre for almost thirty years’ (ibid.: 137b). As shown by Gerloff (Reference Gerloff, Fabian and Ismaiel-Wendt2018: 79a), Sonic Pi’s presets are loaded with Western music and its hegemonic tonal system, such as electronic music styles, as well as sample timbres from popular electronic culture. These arrangements in Sonic Pi allows beginners to achieve pleasant short-term results in the context of Western-hegemonic popular music culture. Furthermore, Sonic Pi according to Emre Dündar, ‘becomes a video game that influenced the music world not in a creative way: since existing contents are used just for changing the places, which in a certain way is yours but in reality, it is a kind of computer game’ (personal communication, 25 December 2022). This has further problems, limiting the user because ‘the content is prepared by others, the samples and materials, the live coder is limited with these toys: and as average programmer/musician you will be a prisoner of that material’ (ibid.). This is why many live coders prefer to program their own presets.
In this sense, live coders from LATAM try to rescue rhythm, which is a fundamental aspect that contrasts to some extent with the practice of live coders from the Global North. First, because rhythm contradicts quantisation, it can never be exact data, at least not easily programmable. Second, the Latin music is nothing quantisable, and if it were quantised, it would die, as Emre Dündar recognises: ‘it is slightly humanizing: all bars are equal, in real live music all bars could never be the same’ (ibid.). At this regard, for example, a group of Colombian live coders carried out ‘algorumbas’ seeking to position Colombian folk genres in opposition to the ‘algoraves’ carried out by European live coders steeped in electronic music.Footnote 17 In Latin genres, from son jarocho,Footnote 18 through reggae (Hutchinson Reference Hutchinson2020: 79–83), such as playing Yoruba batá drums (ibid.: 74),Footnote 19 rhythm is essential, and tonality is almost completely irrelevant. Not to mention the neozapatist jungle corridos,Footnote 20 which seeks to take advantage of the mnemonic qualities of music, making it an important component of the neo-Zapatista movement. Each of these seemingly simple songs has lyrics that are related to complex events and political episodes of the neo-Zapatista movement, both in terms of its founding and its demands and indigenous heritage.
In addition, another step to decolonise sound would be to think about it in a radically counterhumanist way. The monohumanist, liberal and colonial biocentrism that the concept of human beings has, must be recognised and rejected (Wynter and McKittrick Reference Wynter, McKittrick and McKittrick2015: 38–9). In this sense we should think about the sound also beyond the human correlate and not tie it only to the perception of the biocentric human. Instead, we should think about the thresholds to which the very agency of the sonic phenomenon directs us or follow the instrument rather than the actor (Pinch and Bijsterveld Reference Pinch and Bijsterveld2004: 639; Steingo and Sykes Reference Steingo, Sykes, Steingo and Sykes2019: 17–18). In such a way, for example, geontologies extend the life to many entities such as the rocks ‘Two Women Sitting Down’ and ‘Old Man Rock’ that are catalogued by the original population as alive and in that geotology the life/non-life distinction is extended (Povinelli Reference Povinelli2016: 36–44). Also, many animals such as elephants and whales communicate through infrasound or ultrasounds (e.g., mice, moths, cicadas bats, beetles, corn and corals) that humans cannot hear (Bakker Reference Bakker2022: 2). The Darwinian biocosmogony, defined as the ‘selection/dysselection and eugenic/dysgenic codes—the incarnation of symbolic life’ (Wynter and McKittrick: Reference Wynter, McKittrick and McKittrick2015: 37) must be challenged because the main conception is that we are first biological beings who then create culture, when we have always been ‘homo narrans’ first (ibid.: 75, 25).
In this sense, we should not avoid letting people communicate about the listening of machines or any other type of entity from a system theory approach. Indeed, communication can make the perceptions of others ‘accessible’, ‘it can designate perceptions, but what it designates remains operationally inaccessible to communication’ (Mahnkopf Reference Mahnkopf1998: 582–3, our italics). Although it talks about them all the time, we must consider it as something possible to unfold and figure it out. As we discussed, playing the batá drum involves communicating with the gods and listening to the signals they send back.Footnote 21 Furthermore, one could even deny language itself. Laura Zapata points out that ‘language is like a colonizing technology insofar as it proposes order and orders of thought’.Footnote 22 If we consider how perception works and how far away is from any discrete value (here in the sense of coded communication), it is something that we cannot communicate using language anyway: ‘There’s a whole generation who’re grown used to thinking of sensory emotions without having a language for them yet’ (Eshun, cited in Pelleter Reference Pelleter2020: 305).
In the same way that the Mexican live coder Marianne TeixidoFootnote 23 maintains that the knots, colours, and twists of the fabricate woven by the Incas contain binary codes and data and therefore present an epistemic equivalent practice to the current coding of programmers. This idea is very similar to Schneider’s book Textiles Prozessieren, which shows the centrality of the silk weaving trade. Schneider mentions that this craft art form was an early process of information with punched cards, to which, according to her, digitisation owes its existence (Haffke Reference Haffke2019: 21–2).
7. SOME DECOLONIAL METHODOLOGICAL REFLECTIONS
To decolonise sound and knowledge, it is essential to not make other types of knowledge invisible that are not white, European or scientific (Mota Díaz Reference Mota Díaz2016: 10) and to recognise that we are all humanoid aliens (Schulze Reference Schulze2016) who can theorise about sound and this is not just the privilege of academics (Steingo and Sykes Reference Steingo, Sykes, Steingo and Sykes2019: 4). This was also recognised some time ago by academics, because it means acknowledging these double hermeneutics (Giddens Reference Giddens2006: 62) and assuming that it is the agents themselves (as have we tried to do in this article, letting the composers to speak by themselves) who decide on the relationship of what is included and excluded and not previous academic decisions (Luhmann Reference Luhmann2006: 22), that is to say, the task of scientists must be more humble, and it is up to them to follow the series of associations and substitutions between human/non-human actants (Latour Reference Latour, Doménech and Tirado1998: 126) and not decide on them beforehand. To decolonise live coding, it is important to incorporate qualitative methods and apply horizontal methods (Mota Díaz Reference Mota Díaz2016: 26). It also follows some practices of live coding where the power of hierarchies is removed, and where we can talk also about ‘democratic voting systems, mixing algorithms that make sure performers have equal play time, and other playful algorithmic means of challenging established conventions’ (Magnusson Reference Magnusson2019: 190). One way to support this is offered by Black studies that see the method as a compilation of ‘narratives, fictions, whispers, songs, grooves’ (McKittrick Reference McKittrick2021: 3) in which scientific and non-scientific knowledge are storytellings, of which the first represents a weak objectivity because it is intrinsically racist and biologically deterministic and is part of the circuit institutions of global capital (ibid.: 7). The second type of story is seen as the practice of Black life that invites involvement, curiosity and collaboration, in addition to representing a strong objectivity because it starts from the point of view of the marginalised (ibid.: 7; Willey Reference Willey2016: 17). In this order of ideas, one of those who developed a fiction theory who also makes use of narratives and poetics and rehearses this type of strategy is Kodwo Eshun (Schulze Reference Schulze2020: 85). Eshun developed a direct interaction with structural patterns of sound synthesis and phonographic writing, to which he gave sound design a level of abstraction and a quasi-scientific character. For example, in DJ practice, sounds are investigated, cut, isolated and torn out of the context of their musical tradition, thus capturing their motion (Großmann Reference Großmann, Enders, Oberschmidt and Schmitt2013: 168). One way to interact with structural patterns is through the loop. The loop allows the sound elements to be recontextualised and could be played ‘like, two or three days. … When you do something like that, you get to hear all different … elements of it that you never really heard before (Akiem, cited in Großmann Reference Großmann, Enders, Oberschmidt and Schmitt2013: 169). On the other hand, the phonographic work refers to the use of second-hand records by hip hop culture (crate digging) in which the sedimented cultural forms that are being looked for are no longer tonal (in the Western motivic thematic work) but rhythmic and sound substance that are archived phonographically (ibid.: 170). This practice is like the use that live coders make of sound bases (drum kits, loops and a lot of sound packages from different source) in which structural patterns from various traditions are investigated and then are refunctionalised in a new design. It is in this sense that the DJ becomes ‘Klangforscher’ (ibid.: 168).Footnote 24 Eshun invites us to reverse the theory/practice binary, that is, if we test theories with practices and not vice versa – ‘and the way you can test them out is to actually play the records’ (Eshun, cited in Schulze Reference Schulze2020: 90). This idea can be thought of as an alternative epistemology, in which an experiential constellation and mixtures can be expressed by their own actors (ibid.: 98).
8. CONCLUSIONS: LIVE CODING IN LATAM AS SEARCH FOR AN ALTERDESTINY
Although we tried to highlight the negative and unknown side of the algorithm, not everything is lost. Music/sound programs such as SuperCollider, Max or Python allow programmers/musicians to create their own sonic worlds, their own sonic fictions.Footnote 25 For LATAM live coders, these sonic fictions implies a political practice, as Laura Zapata says, ‘live coding is the baby of hacktivism: it bets on technology, and free access software; necessarily, one who does live coding has a political stance’ (personal communication, 6 March 2021).Footnote 26 This sonic fiction also implies reaching an AlterDestiny that involves a political position, now that sonic fiction points out ‘the infinite task of cultural decolonization’ (Schulze Reference Schulze2020: 77, italics added). This AlterDestiny comes from the desire to imagine a different society that involves the ‘sensibility of implexes’, which could work with the use of fiction in different concepts (ibid.: 53). Live coding could also let us imagine a new and more inclusive sonic world that is implicitly negated by white non-inclusive aurality European practices (ibid.: 63–4).Footnote 27
Live coding has a disruptive power because it finds new ways to share culture and sonic concepts that is constantly reworking in its character as an epistemic artefact. Live coding as epistemic artefact, as way of storing, reproducing, self-sabotaging and regaining sound, could also be seen as ‘capable and versatile enough to indeed carry valid messages, artistic performances and cultural representations’ (ibid.: 66). Such practices, so ‘apt for travelling and cultural exchange’ (ibid.), also present numerous sonic possibilities, as well as non-sonic ones for connecting people, places and cultures. This fact means that we should not assume that live coding just represents a sound-artistic paradigm but that it could also unfold a new auditory cultural political practice. As we propose in this article, the way to do this is by avoiding the hegemony of the pitch and focusing on the rhythm or whatever entity it is proposed by the cultural sound practice. This could be achieved by learning by hearing, as Libertad, another Mexican live coder composer describes it:
I don’t think much when playing … I listen more than I think … I listen to them and then I try to locate myself at some point sonically based on what I had already worked on before … From what I already know that I bring, that I already know how it sounds, I try to locate it. (Villaseñor Reference Villaseñor Ramírez2017: 66)
As Rachel Cusk said, ‘I had found out more, I said, by listening than I had ever thought possible’ (Cusk Reference Cusk2018: 243). Sonic fiction should function as an ‘auditory (de)ontological test balloon’ (Pelleter Reference Pelleter2020: 397).
Finally, live coding can be seen both as a medium and as a message. Or like the famous cited quote of Marshall McLuhan ‘the medium is the message’ or as Friedrich Kittler put it, ‘The content of a medium is always and strictly … another medium: in the case of the typewriter the handwriting, in the case of the feature film the novel, in the case of the gramophone the voice and in the case of entertainment radio the record industry’ (Kittler Reference Kittler2002:14). In our case, is live coding an artistic co-product of the introduction of coding in the acceleration digitalisation of the next society and its surplus of control?Footnote 28 Is live coding in LATAM a medium of political contestation of the destructive, neo-extractivism and neo-colonial logic in the next society? Should the live coding in LATAM be the antagonism noise, the jam à la Friedrich Kittler, and avoid focusing on the symbolic part of the live coding, instead focusing in the sonic fiction output that it involves and keep blurring everything as an the infinite task of decoloniality:Footnote 29 ‘blurring the traditional performer–audience spatial divide … blur most concepts of established musical discourse, such as composer, performer, and audience; instrument, score, and piece; composition, performance, and improvisation; stage and auditorium; and instrument and tool’ (Magnusson Reference Magnusson2014: 14)? These questions and inquiries should be addressed in further investigations. This small article tries to contribute to the live coding discussion and to go beyond the European experience’s usual provisionalisation and experimentalisation of sound/technical phenomena.