Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Diamanda Galas Interview: Talking Her Songs Of Exile

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Diamanda Galas Interview: Talking Her Songs Of Exile

    DIAMANDA GALAS INTERVIEW: TALKING HER SONGS OF EXILE
    Petra Davis

    The Quietus
    Sept 9 2009

    As long as the vulgar Greek exists in this world By Allah, my hatred
    won't leave me As long as I see him there like a dog By Allah, this
    hatred won't leave me...

    Even if I crush thirty thousand of their heads with a stone Even if
    I wrench out the teeth of ten thousand And throw a hundred thousand
    of their corpses into the river By Allah, this hatred won't leave me.

    Excerpt from 'Hatred', a poem published in the Turkish newspaper
    Hurriyet, immediately preceding the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974.

    Watching Diamanda Galas perform on her recent Songs Of Exile tour
    is a reminder that her consummate musicianship is not derived simply
    from technique, but from passionate belief, albeit expressed through
    perfect muscle memory. Transported, wayward light scattering her long
    shadow across the audience, she calls on the ghosts of ideas in their
    own languages. The purity of her intention is what holds together the
    various strands of this song cycle - her trademark amanes, the ancient
    lament that she has described as "the last cry of the soldier on the
    battlefield"; the guttural, beautiful blues of 'See That My Grave
    Is Swept Clean'; and her spectral interpretations of the poetry of
    Paul Celan, Cesar Vallejo, Adonis: disparate writers bound by their
    experiences of enforced separation from their homes and cultural
    traditions. Disapora - the scattered: the term implies devastation,
    the advent of an irresistible force.

    Galas too is an exile of sorts. As a Greek American with a complex
    cultural background, she is heiress to the traditions of Asia Minor:
    to the diverse cultures of ancient Byzantium, and to their dissipation
    under the Ottoman Empire. Her understanding of ethnic cleansing links
    the bloody conflicts of the ancient empires, the multiple genocides
    of the modern Turkish state, and the spiritual exile of all those
    imprisoned, tortured, or dispossessed by virtue of their identity. As
    passionate and referential as her work implies, Galas in conversation
    is also possessed of a wonderful gallows humour, and a rare ability
    to demonstrate artistic, conceptual, and political parallels across
    centuries, continents, or ideological differences.

    Your subjects are esoteric by the standards of mainstream music,
    and overtly political by the standards of modern classical or the
    avant-garde. How do you think you're perceived by music critics?

    Oh, there's 'the AIDS woman', there were a lot of magazines that
    called me that. And they may consider me an elitist, because I have
    technique, but of course, I consider pop singers who go up onstage
    drunk, with no technique, and have very wealthy record companies,
    to be completely elitist. What else? Depressing. Oh, please, if a
    man sings a depressing song, they love it.

    Johnny Cash! He's 95 and nearly dead, wheel him out, another video,
    pair him off with Nine Inch Nails. Oh, the pathos...five stars!

    Right. Exactly. I can't stand the sentimentality that all this
    implies. I think these guys have trouble getting it up. Music is
    their Viagra and they go to the pub, load up the jukebox, and then
    they talk about fucking. And really, everything that I've ever done
    is antithetical [to that]. I don't imagine that anything I do would
    be of any interest to them.

    The idea of yourself as an outlaw or an exile is central to some of
    the voices in your work, isn't it?

    There's a song I perform called 'Huparko' - which just means 'I
    exist'. It's the simplest form of defiance. Some people are born
    outlaws, or they become outlaws because the laws literally change to
    force them out. That's what Songs Of Exile is all about. It's mainly
    focused on Asia Minor, on the experiences of exiles from what is now
    called Turkey - which I do not call Turkey. The only reason that
    Turkey's called Turkey is because if you called it anything else
    they would call it an insult to Turkishness and you'd be killed. It
    should be called Anatolia, which is comprised of many ethnic groups
    and was comprised of more until they committed the genocides, the
    ethnic cleansing.

    So, the song cycle that you've recently been performing relates
    specifically to the genocides against the Armenian, Assyrian and
    Greek populations within what's now called Turkey, which the Turkish
    government adamantly denies. And to perform these songs now is to
    continue to resist Turkish genocide denial and also to proclaim the
    cultural life of Anatolia?

    Sometimes literally. I perform one text called 'Exo Unane', which
    translates as 'Get out, Greek'... 'exo' means 'get out' in Greek,
    and then 'unan'... it isn't a Greek word, but it means 'Greek', it's
    an insulting word, it's what we're called by the Turks. There are
    two voices in the text: first I'm singing 'Exo Unane', and my tone
    is inhuman. Then I sing a beautiful text which comes from Trebzon:
    I found a recording of men, women and children singing this song,
    lamenting the deportations. [When I perform it] I sing those verses
    and then in between I'm doing these interjections in Turkish, as
    though on a bullhorn: here are your orders. Get out.

    How important is it to you for your audience to understand that moment
    of realisation - the moment when you become aware that the state is
    against you, that they're coming for you?

    Well, it's very normal to people from Anatolia or other places where
    genocides happen, and completely incomprehensible to those outside
    of it. How can I put this... there's a poem called 'Hatred', which
    is unbelievable. It's probably the perfect illustration of what I'm
    talking about. It was published in a Turkish national newspaper, just
    before the invasion of Cyprus. It's very famous. All it talks about
    is the desire, in the name of Allah, to decapitate as many thousands
    of Greeks as [possible]. [laughs] It's a very badly written poem, but
    it's proof that that was the aim. Open up the daily paper, there it is.

    OK - I want to read that. I'll google it now.

    OK, I'll drink my tea while you look. Did you find it?

    Oh my god. I'm reading it now.

    Great, well there you go.

    It just goes on and on! Decapitate this many, pull their teeth out,
    throw them in the river...this guy is a busy little bee.

    Oh god. I love it. You're such a fucking drag queen.

    I'm going to take that as a compliment.

    You should! We female drag queens are a rare and ancient breed.

    This poem is so terrible! There's something undealable-with about
    it. It has the attention to detail of a serial killer, but the epic
    scale of a general. It's so evil it's almost self-parody.

    Yes, absolutely. But it's real, those murders happened. I use the
    work of many writers and singers and musicians who were martyred -
    Siamanto, for example, the Armenian writer, who was assassinated, or
    the Assyrian poet, Dr. Freidoun Bet-Oraham, one of the most significant
    writers in his tradition, who was executed. So many writers and poets
    and musicians were executed or committed suicide. I go to these places
    and spend months researching the texts of the murdered and then I
    come back to New York and I think, 'Ah, you whining motherfuckers,
    man, have you ever been to a place where there's no food?'

    But the people who have been through that kind of extremity are stoic
    like you wouldn't believe! I had the same feeling when I was working
    with asylum seekers from Iraqi Kurdistan, Afghanistan, the Congo. They
    had been through experiences I had no way to conceptualise. I felt
    I had had an extended psychic adolescence, as a white girl who grew
    up in a post-colonial social democracy, and then dealing with this
    was my rude awakening. I had no time for my friends' minidramas any
    more. They'd phone me up crying, 'I broke up with my boyfriend,'
    and I'd just hang up on them.

    HA.

    Seriously, they made a joke about it - 'If you haven't been vaginally
    tortured with a hairdryer, she doesn't wanna know you anymore.'

    [laughs] But don't you find it astonishing that anyone could be
    [so self-absorbed]? The only thing I can think of is that they
    have never, ever experienced any physical pain in their lives. Real
    pain. Over here [in the US] the most intelligent people are driving the
    cabs. I'm serious - they've got like, major degrees in astrophysics
    and chemistry, and they're driving cabs for these disgusting little
    bitches on their cellphones, talking about when they're gonna see their
    boyfriend next or something, it's truly unbelievable, and it's so sad.

    Presumably then, seeing those kinds of unequal, almost colonial
    relationships in US culture is another reason diasporadic voices are
    so important to you?

    Yes. The voices of the diaspora are extremely important. The diaspora
    of Anatolia is huge, and often the diaspora are preserving cultural
    or artistic forms and texts that are outlawed or destroyed in the
    country of origin, actually. People like me in the diaspora of Greece
    are creating works that it might not have occurred to us to create
    if we were living on the mainland. Many of the great innovators are
    writers or artists from the diaspora. I mean, El Greco lived in Spain!

    That's what I noticed about the poets you choose to use in your work
    as well, people like Paul Celan, or Cesar Vallejo, or even Pasolini:
    that apart from being astonishing writers, they were all exiles in
    different ways. It implies that you think of exile as a spiritual as
    well as a physical condition.

    Yes, in different ways. Celan was exiled to Austria, Vallejo lived
    in self-imposed exile in Paris, for example. Celan's parents were
    deported, imprisoned and executed by the Nazis, and Celan was put
    in a labour camp and eventually committed suicide. Vallejo, when he
    was living in Peru, witnessed the virtual slavery of his people on
    the sugar plantations. Pasolini lived as an outlaw in his culture,
    as a homosexual. And 'Be Sure That My Grave Is Kept Clean', which
    is also part of this cycle, that specifically is a reference to the
    AIDS epidemic. Because there's no-one who lives more as an exile
    than someone with AIDS in any country he or she lives in. When I was
    recording Defixiones [her 2003 album based around the modern Turkish
    genocides], it was inescapable and quite parallel, the links between
    genocide and the killing of gay people - all the articles I would
    read about how gay people were buried alive into walls in Egypt and
    Turkey. And they continue to do this.

    I was reading just yesterday some news from Iraq, about the torture and
    execution of gay men who have their rectums glued shut with specialist
    surgical glue and then they're fed drinks to induce diarrhea.

    WHAT???

    I'll send you the link.

    Oh I wish you would! Oh my God!

    They're given drinks to induce diarrhoea and then they drown in their
    own diarrhoea.

    Oh my God! Oh my God! Oh my God! Oh my God! Oh my God! You see - I
    consider myself completely anti-monotheistic. Monotheism to me is a
    closed brain, it's a person who has read one book and is a servant. You
    know why most world leaders are atheists? They don't believe in God
    because they believe they are God. They are their own book. And this
    is what happens. Are these executions happening in prison?

    No, this is at roadblocks. It's almost as though the larger conflict
    is just repatterning itself in all the social tensions that are within
    that culture.

    Corr-ect! Corr-ect! That's exactly what's happening in Iraq now, larger
    conflicts promote smaller conflicts. It's like an ecosystem. Take
    the Kurds in Iraq, who themselves were subject to ethnic cleansing:
    they are now eradicating the Assyrians. And the Assyrians, because
    they're the smallest minority group, are fleeing, with nowhere to
    go. This is the oldest culture of Iraq, and it's a culture that's
    now going to be lost, because it's being systematically destroyed,
    and that's being overlooked in the story of the Iraq conflict.

    And the real story is nothing like what's portrayed from either side
    in any case.

    Right. Who's telling the story of Western interference in the
    oil-bearing nations anymore? You've got the US media portraying it as
    an issue with Islam, which it is not. And then you've got Osama Bin
    Laden filming his recruitment video in the Regency hotel with imported
    sand, acting like he's in the desert. Aside from how totally pathetic
    that is - he's nothing to do with the issue! He's from Saudi, his
    family has links to the US government! You know his sister's trying
    to get a rock 'n' roll gig with a fuckin' facelift and a nose job
    in New York? But nobody wants to hire a Bin Laden to do Alice Cooper
    songs anymore. Maybe she'll entertain the troops. [laughs]

    Diamanda Galas plays the dates below during October. For a series
    of exclusive downloads on her own Intravenal Sound Operations label,
    visit Diamanda Galas' website

    October 1 Pop Montreal Music Festival Concordia University, Montreal,
    Canada Talk as part of HIV/AIDS Lecture Series

    October 3 Pop Montreal Music Festival Theatre Outremont, Montreal,
    Canada Diamanda Galás in Concert: Voice and Piano Tickets are $35

    October 6 New Hazlett Theatre, Pittsburgh Tickets are $20 for adults,
    $10 for students

    October 22 Carousel: The Songs Of Jacques Brel featuring Diamanda
    Galas, Marc Almond and more Barbican Centre, London

    October 23 Warwick Arts Centre Carousel: The Songs of Jacques Brel

    November 24 Pallas Theater, Athens (Greece)
Working...
X