Thursday, May 7, 2015




2000

NEON 002
12''
Clear vinyl
One-sided 14 min.
Soundtrack from the video Guitar Drag, 2000. Recorded in San Antonio Texas, on 18th November 1999.

Mastered by Vynilium.ch by Flo Kaufmann
Cover design by Ellinor Gylling with stills from the video.
Edition 1500 copies, 50 signed/numbered
Released April 2006



Guitar Drag by Christian Marclay is now being released on Neon Records. The record is actually the sound track for Marclay's video with the same title that was shown first at London's Hayward Gallery sound art exhibition ìSonic Boomî in 2000. The piece as well as Marclay has become an icon in sound art circles, and although the video can only be seen in exhibitions as an installation, it is widely known. The full 14 minutes sound track is released on a beautiful 12'' clear vinyl record packaged in a sleeve with stills from the video.




Filmed in San Antonio Texas, it shows an amplified Fender Stratocaster guitar attached to a rope being pulled behind a pick-up truck. As the guitar drags across the road it produces a range of sounds from the bumping and the friction against the varied surfaces.

































A fantastic visual piece, but also an amazing sound piece, that stands just as well alone, and in some ways just as visual! From the first sounds of duct-tape being ripped, the familiar sound of someone gently slamming the strings of the guitar, to the sounds of an engine starting and then slowly the beginning of a sound that is hollow and at the same time human, and that takes us through the deepest roarings to high pitch screams until the very end when it all slows down and stops, unwillingly it seems.




Knowing the story behind the work or not, the sound itself triggers your imaginaton, leaving your soul no peace. For even if this could be seen, or heard, solely as a beautiful noisy sound piece, there is too much to the idea behind Guitar Drag, for it to not leave you restless and thoughtful.



Guitar Drag has many different layers of references, it alludes to the ritual of smashing guitars in rock concerts, it recalls Fluxus and its many destruction of instruments. It is also like a road movie, with reference to the landscape of Texas where it was filmed, with references to cowboys and rodeos. It is about violence in general and more specifically about the lynching of James Byrd Jr. who was dragged to his death behind a pickup-truck. I want the video to have these multiple layers and trigger people's imagination in contradictory ways. The piece ends up being seductive and repulsive at the same time.

Christian Marclay, 2001




Over the last decade, Marclay has created ambitious work in a variety of media. The video Guitar Drag (2000) features a Fender Stratocaster being dragged behind a pick-up truck along rough country roads in Texas. While on one level the work is an expression of Marclay’s interest in creating a new sound, it is also a nod to the guitar-destroying antics of rock stars as well as a reference to the murder of James Byrd Jr., an African-American man dragged to his death behind a pick-up truck.





Guitar Drag: An Allegory of Destruction in Art and Popular Music
Guitar Drag begins as an unidentified man methodically secures an electric guitar—a red Fender Stratocaster—with duct tape and a piece of rope to the back of a pickup truck and then plugs the instrument's cable into an amplifier on the bed of the vehicle. He starts the truck's engine and drags the amplified guitar behind the vehicle as it speeds across grass, dirt and, most noisily, asphalt. The soundtrack features two aural registers: the abrasive clamor that screeches from the amplifier as the guitar is jerked and bounced violently across the terrain and the atmospheric growl that is produced by the motion of the pickup truck and the guitar's wooden body as it jerks and bounces across the ground. In its exhibition, the video is installed on a playback loop in a dark gallery space, and the sound is aggressively loud.
When one walks toward the room in which the video plays, the sound can be heard from a distance; the audio component of the installation envelops the spaces that adjoin its projection. The artist described the exhibition conditions as an imperative: "It has to be a projection, it has to be loud. . . . It has to be a physical experience; you need to feel it through your body. It's not a pleasant experience, though some people are exhilarated by the sound, its rock quality."1 Encountering Guitar Drag in a museum or gallery space is something like walking into a rock-and-roll arena concert. 



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