038 :: THUNDERCLOUD

Listen to "038 :: THUNDERCLOUD" on Spreaker.

Featuring

"NO TITLE AS OF 13 FEBRUARY 2024 28,340 DEAD" by Godspeed You! Black Emperor, released by Constellation in 2024. Listen / Buy direct

Transcript

Must music have a meaning? Does it have any other choice? Obviously, music need not be representational; its sounds need not be taken to depict anything, concrete or abstract. But what, then, to make of the fact that music can so readily bring us into a certain feeling or state of mind or situation? Surely, such music must be said to be conveying something – something ineffable perhaps, but not void of sense.

Even this music, what's playing right now, seems rich in significance, despite its minimal elements. I hear in it an unsteady serenity, a momentary peace, an eerie quiet, the calm before the storm, electricity in the air, bristling, quivering, full of foreboding. And then, the sky begins to rain down.

The opening salvo is a simple motif on guitar, made jagged through layers of distortion and delay. But it is quickly joined by a cascade of supporting artillery: an unrelenting beat pounded out by the bass and the drums, a second guitar doubling the motif in a higher register, a counterpoint from a violin (or is it spiraling out of control?), the beat now hammered out by cymbals, propelling it on even further, and a third guitar, slicing through the burning sky.

At last, the full cannonade arrives, and it's immediately disorienting, as the downbeat shifts below our feet, the two becomes the one and the one becomes the four: one last cataclysm in a whirlwind of chaos.

Can there be any doubt as to what this music is trying to convey? It's hard to hear it as anything but a violent attack, a relentless assault, an inescapable blitz. Sounds howl through the air like missiles, made all the more terrifying by their patent coordination. The song's title describes it bluntly: "raindrops cast in lead". But there's another sound that can be heard, nestled deep within the maelstrom, an uncanny brightness amidst the unending destruction. I hesitate to try to say what it is. Some awful beauty? Some glimmer of hope?

And then, a reprieve; and then, a disorientation of a different kind; and then, a voice – something rarely heard in this band's almost exclusively instrumental oeuvre. And it's not the voice of one of the band's members; it's not even in their, or my, mother tongue. So let me translate:

Raindrops cast in lead
Our side illuminated
And then extinguished and buried and finished
Under the perfect sun
Under the body falling from the sky
They were martyrs who fell
Because on our side they are martyrs since before we were even born
Those who tried and were killed for trying
Those who died young, angry or old, and never saw the dawn
Innocents and children and the tiny bodies who laughed and then fell asleep forever
And never saw the beauty of the dawn

"The beauty of the dawn" – is that what we were hearing earlier, barely audible beneath the barrage? Is that what we were hearing just before this, breaking through for a moment of interstitial tranquility? Is that what is now again being occluded, as the devastation starts anew? As we move into the song's second figure, a simple back and forth between two chords, between suspension and resolution, between tension and release, between uncertain possibility and brutal fact.

And we're just getting started. This onslaught will continue for another three minutes – screeching, sundering, spinning out, filling the sky till there's nothing else, nothing but its program of annihilation. And there will always be more. Just when you think it's reached the height of its aggression, it gets even louder, even heavier, even noisier, even more wild and fierce.

You may, at this juncture, very well be wondering, What's the point of all this? Sure, it's impressive, and unnerving, how this music can bring such a horrific scene to life. But it is, in the end, a representation, not to be confused with the reality, which is, of course, unspeakably worse. But representations can also show us aspects of reality that reality itself obscures. And so I come back to that note of awful beauty, the silver lining in the thundercloud, an indomitable spirit that can be heard beneath everything, despite everything, amidst the blistering violence an invincible glimmer of radical hope.

But this music is not meant to be triumphant. It will present us with the possibility of resilience, but not its realization. Instead, it leaves us here, in haunting suspension, for there are many who will never see the beauty of the dawn.

Liner Notes

The voice reading the poem is Michele Fiedler Fuentes. Here it is in its original Spanish:

Gotas de lluvia fundidas en plomo
Nuestro lado iluminado
Y luego apagado y enterrado y terminado
Debajo del sol perfecto
Debajo del cuerpo cayendo del cielo
Fueron mártires que cayeron
Porque en nuestro lado son mártires desde antes que siquiera hubiéramos nacido
Las que trataron y fueron asesinadas por tratar
Las que murieron jóvenes, enfurecidas o viejas, y nunca vieron el amanecer
Inocentes y niños y los pequeñitos cuerpos que rieron y luego quedaron dormidos para siempre
Y nunca vieron la belleza del amanecer

This episode is named after another excellent song from the album, BABYS IN A THUNDERCLOUD.

The casualty numbers I cite in the sign-off were sourced from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, specifically their reported impacted snapshot from November 19, 2024.