Avant-Guardian Interviewed by Niels Latomme https://kraak.net/avant-guardian/tag/jason-kahn-christian-wolfarth
Niels Latomme: Once I interviewed the saxophone player Johns Lunds, and he told me his approach to collaboration is actually about confrontation, not about finding each other in playing. Does this count for your approach when you work together as well? Jason Kahn: No, I don’t agree. I don’t feel Christian’s approach is academic. His background, as I understand it, has probably more influence from jazz than anything else. In terms of something being ‘abstract’, both voice (and guitar in my case) as well as percussion are working in an abstract way. We’re not communicating something concrete like a certain rhythm or melody. This music is by nature abstract. I think the tension implicit in this duo stems from the musical dialog and not the juxtaposition of the different instruments. I actually don’t feel like an instrument is that important for the music. What makes a difference for me is the person behind the instrument. In my case, this means I could play drums or guitar or electronics and it would still be me. I just happen to think that in the duo with Christian that the voice and percussion are a good combination. Christian had the idea later on to add the guitar.
Jason Kahn: No, in my opinion the starting point for working together is a kind of shared set of ideas on how to collaborate and a personal rapport.
Jason Kahn: I’m not trying to achieve anything with the music. It’s so abstract that it can have no protocol or reason to be. It just is.
Christian Wolfarth: Yes, that’s true. I still have the feeling that my instruments, cymbals and drums, are not really explored for me. So, I don’t feel the need to change to something else at the moment.
Jason Kahn: I think when you start using terms like real or reality you almost can’t go any further. These words are way too vast to be thought of in anything but a very unlimited way. We would have to have a very long discussion about what real or reality is to even start to think about answering this question. In terms of a Marxist context, with commodity, etc, the only way my music could not be a commodity is if I didn’t earn or expect to earn any money from it. But because I get paid for concerts and recordings my music is de facto a commodity. The only way I could escape this would be to play on the street without asking for any money. Or just playing in the forest.
Jason Kahn: I don’t think in terms of musical vs. non-musical sounds. For me, as soon as we perceive a sound as musical (meaning: it is music for us) then the sound is musical. And I perceive all sounds as musical, whether from a musical instrument or the wind blowing through some trees. My political considerations have less to do with music specifically than with the notions of listening, both as a singular listener and in a shared space, whether that be in the context of concert or walking down the street with many other people.
Jason Kahn: I would definitely agree. Anyone can activate a space. You don’t even have to use your voice for this. Just being aware of a space and one’s place in it activates that space. And by space, I don’t necessarily mean an acoustical or physical space. This could also be something like the space of social interaction, the space of dissent, the space of resistance, and during a concert both the performer and the audience simultaneously activate the space of listening with their energy and focus on the moment. This is one of the things which still interest me as a performer.
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