Missax 20 10 09 Mona Wales The Cure Pt 1 Direct
“The Cure (Pt 1)” is a 15‑minute, multi‑channel composition originally performed in a surround‑sound setup (4.1). Its architecture can be divided into three loosely defined sections:
| Section | Approx. Time | Sonic Characteristics | |---------|--------------|------------------------| | A – “Incision” | 0:00‑4:30 | Sparse ambient drones, low‑frequency sine waves mimicking a surgical monitor’s beeps; occasional distant metallic clangs. | | B – “Remediation” | 4:30‑10:15 | Introduction of glitch‑rhythms (granular slicing of a 1970s soul sample), layered with a field recording of a hospital corridor. Vocals appear—processed, whisper‑like spoken word fragments: “the skin remembers, the code rewrites.” | | C – “After‑glow” | 10:15‑15:00 | A gradual decay into a warm, analog‑synth pad reminiscent of early ambient pioneers (Brian Eno, Harold Budd), punctuated by a faint, looping children's choir. |
The work deliberately refrains from providing a resolution. The final ambient pad dissolves slowly, leaving the listener in a state of suspended expectancy. This open-endedness is essential: it forces the audience to confront the incompleteness of any cure and the ongoing nature of healing. The phrase “Pt 1” signals that the investigation is unfinished—there will be subsequent parts that may introduce new modalities (perhaps a “cure” through community, or a “cure” through loss). missax 20 10 09 mona wales the cure pt 1
The final section sees all the previous elements dissolve into a single, sustained synth pad filtered through a slow‑attack low‑pass. The pad’s harmonic content is based on a just‑intonation chord (C‑E‑G♭‑B♭), a tuning system historically associated with healing music in various cultures. The children's choir—recorded in a London primary school—provides a tonal anchor of innocence, but it is looped so slowly that the words become indecipherable, suggesting that the notion of “cure” is itself obscured.
When the composition moves into its central segment, a looped 2‑second vocal sample from a 1972 soul track (“I’m feeling better now”) is granularly stretched and re‑sequenced, producing a “stuttered” effect reminiscent of time‑compression therapy in psychoacoustic research. The glitch rhythm—irregular, syncopated bursts of 8‑bit noise—functions as a metaphor for intervention, disrupting the monotony of the preceding drone. “The Cure (Pt 1)” is a 15‑minute, multi‑channel
The spoken‑word fragments are taken from a transcribed interview with neurologist Oliver Sacks, filtered through a formant shifter to render them simultaneously intimate and alien. The line “the skin remembers, the code rewrites” is repeated, underscoring a central motif: the body as both a biological repository and a digital script capable of being edited.
The opening is built around a continuous 3 Hz sine wave, calibrated to the average resting heart rate of a human adult (≈72 bpm). By subtly modulating its amplitude with a low‑frequency oscillator (LFO) that mirrors a EKG waveform, Wales transforms the listener’s own physiological state into a resonant feedback loop. The result is an uncanny bodily immersion: the audience literally “feels” the beat as if their own pulse were being monitored. | | B – “Remediation” | 4:30‑10:15 |
Interspersed are sampled scalpel clicks—short, high‑frequency transients processed through a bit‑crusher to evoke the metallic snap of old‑school medical tools. These sounds are panned dynamically across the four speakers, creating a sense of movement through a surgical theatre.