Sunday, July 5, 2026

The Typeface as Score: From Carson to Experimental Composition

 


The Typeface as Score: From Carson to Experimental Composition

Typography is rarely considered a notational system. We think of fonts as vessels for text. The message matters, the font merely carries it. But in experimental music, this hierarchy dissolves. The font becomes the message. The typeface itself is musical instruction.

This investigation examines how custom-designed notation fonts function as compositional tools, drawing a direct lineage from the typographic rebellion of David Carson and P. Scott Makela through the FUSEFONT movement and into contemporary notational practice. The argument is simple but radical: graphic design is music notation. Type design is compositional decision-making. When a composer creates a custom font for their scores, they are not decorating notation. They are expanding what notation can say.



David Carson and the Dissolution of Readability

David Carson's work in the 1990s committed what modernist designers considered a cardinal sin: he made typography illegible. His designs for Ray Gun magazine refused clarity in favor of emotional intensity. Text twisted, layered, fragmented. Some passages were deliberately unreadable.

The modernist response was swift and condescending: this is chaos, irresponsibility, the death of communication. But Carson's real argument was more sophisticated. He insisted that how something looks communicates as much as what it says. Legibility is not a neutral virtue. It is a choice with philosophical consequences. Typography that prioritizes clarity above all else imposes a specific kind of order, a specific kind of meaning.

In Carson's work, chaos becomes a form of communication. Difficulty becomes a message. The viewer must work to understand, and that work is part of the meaning.

This principle is foundational to experimental notation.






P. Scott Makela and the Algorithmic Font

P. Scott Makela's work occupied a different but complementary position. Makela was obsessed with systems. how typefaces could be generated through rule-based design, how fonts could carry internal logic that shaped their own evolution. His fonts were not designed through individual letterforms but through understanding the generative principles that produced those forms.

Makela's influence was toward systematic complexity: fonts that operate according to their own internal logic, fonts that contain rules more than they contain static forms. The typeface becomes a system within which variation and specificity can emerge.

This is deeply musical thinking. It is thinking about how constraints generate possibility, how rules enable rather than restrict variation, how a system can contain infinite specific instances while remaining coherent.


FUSEFONT and the Emancipation of the Typeface

The FUSEFONT movement (and the broader experimental typography of the 1990s Macintosh era) radicalized both Carson's and Makela's approaches. FUSEFONT was not a single aesthetic but a principle: that typefaces could be tools of experimentation, that fonts could carry meaning beyond letter forms, that typography could be as adventurous as any other creative practice.

FUSEFONT designers created fonts that:

  • Refused standard proportions and metrics
  • Combined incompatible styles within a single typeface
  • Used symbolic imagery as substitutes for letters
  • Integrated image and text simultaneously
  • Treated each glyph as an independent expressive act
  • Rejected the assumption that a font must be "usable" in any conventional sense

FUSEFONT was not about readability. It was about meaning, expression, and the typeface as a complete creative artifact.

This is the moment when typography becomes notation. When a font is no longer primarily a tool for communicating someone else's text, but becomes the primary expression itself.


FROM TYPOGRAPHY TO MUSICAL NOTATION

The Problem with Conventional Music Notation

Standard music notation encodes specific information through specific symbols: a half note equals two beats, a sharp raises the pitch a semitone, a fermata indicates to hold the note longer than normal. The system presupposes that:

  1. Time is divisible into equal, countable units
  2. Pitch can be represented on a five-line staff
  3. The meaning of a symbol is universal and unambiguous
  4. The notation should be maximally clear and unambiguous

These presuppositions work well for certain kinds of music. But they severely limit what notation can express or what a performer can understand about a score.

Conventional notation cannot easily express:

  • Emotional tone or affect
  • Cultural or geographical context
  • The performer's physical experience of playing
  • Ambiguity or indeterminacy
  • Visual beauty as part of the musical message
  • The messy, human, non-systematic aspects of music-making

Custom Notation Fonts as Liberation

A custom notation font solves none of these problems through standardization. Instead, it solves them through specificity and expression.

When a composer designs a custom font for their scores, they are making decisions about what information matters, how that information should appear, what aesthetic values the notation embodies, and what relationship the performer should have with the written score.

These are fundamentally compositional decisions.

A notation font that uses varying size, weight, and form to encode pitch creates a different performer experience than a font that uses position on a staff. A font that introduces illegibility, texture, or visual noise creates a different relationship between performer and score than one that maximizes clarity. A font that carries emotional or symbolic weight changes what the performer brings to the act of performance.

The custom notation font is not decoration added to musical notation. It is the notational system itself.


DESIGN INFLUENCES AND COMPOSITIONAL PHILOSOPHY

Inherited Principles from Carson

From David Carson, contemporary notation design inherits:

  1. Refusal of neutrality - The visual appearance of notation is not neutral. It carries meaning and intention.
  2. Embrace of difficulty - If a score is hard to read, that difficulty might be part of what it expresses. Clarity is not always the goal.
  3. Emotional and sensory intensity - Typography (and notation) should address the viewer's senses and emotions, not just their intellectual understanding.
  4. Layering and complexity - Multiple messages can coexist in a single notational gesture. Ambiguity and clarity can occupy the same space.
  5. Authority of the designer - The visual designer (typographer, notator) has full authority to make choices that violate convention if those choices serve the composition.

Carson's influence suggests that experimental notation doesn't need to apologize for being difficult. Difficulty is a choice with meaning.

Inherited Principles from Makela

From P. Scott Makela, contemporary notation design inherits:

  1. Systemic thinking - A notation system should operate according to internal rules. Those rules should be intelligible to a performer.
  2. Generative possibility - A set of notational principles should be able to generate many specific instances while remaining coherent.
  3. Constraint as enabler - Strict rules about how notation functions can actually enable greater expressive possibility, not limit it.
  4. The algorithm as creative tool - Rules-based generation is not mechanical. It is a form of creativity.
  5. Transparency of process - A performer should be able to understand the logic behind the notation, even if that logic is complex.

Makela's influence suggests that experimental notation should be systematic. It should contain rules. Those rules should be discoverable.



Inherited Principles from FUSEFONT

From the FUSEFONT movement, contemporary notation design inherits:

  1. The emancipation of the glyph - Each individual symbol (note, articulation, dynamic marking) can be a complete expressive act. It need not follow the rules governing other glyphs.
  2. Hybrid communication - Typography can combine linguistic and iconic information simultaneously. Text and image are not separate.
  3. Semantic richness - A single typographic gesture can carry multiple meanings simultaneously.
  4. The typeface as artistic artifact - A notation font is not a utilitarian tool. It is an artwork in its own right.
  5. Refusal of standardization - Each font can be designed specifically for its purpose. Universal conventions are unnecessary and often limiting.

FUSEFONT influence suggests that experimental notation should be rich, ambiguous, beautiful, and radically specific to its purpose.




CUSTOM FONTS IN PRACTICE. THE COMPOSITIONAL DECISION-MAKING

When a composer designs a custom notation font, they are making decisions at multiple levels simultaneously:

Visual Decisions

  • What information does size encode? (Pitch range? Intensity? Importance?)
  • What information does weight encode? (Dynamic? Timbre? Structural role?)
  • What information does color encode? (Harmonic function? Performer? Temporal location?)
  • What information does texture/pattern encode? (Emotional quality? Complexity? Density?)
  • What is the relationship between clarity and obscurity?
  • What is the visual balance between tradition and innovation?

Semantic Decisions

  • What does this font express about the music it notates?
  • What cultural or historical references does it carry?
  • Does the typography suggest a specific emotional tone?
  • Does it reference other notational traditions?
  • Does it honor or challenge the performer's expectations?

Performative Decisions

  • What kind of relationship does this notation create between performer and score?
  • Does the notation invite careful study, or quick interpretation?
  • Does the visual appearance suggest how the music should sound?
  • Does the font make the performer aware of their own physicality in playing?
  • What work does the performer have to do to understand the notation?

Philosophical Decisions

  • What does this notation say about what music is?
  • What does it value? Clarity or ambiguity? Precision or interpretation? Tradition or innovation?
  • How does the notation reflect the composer's relationship to the musical tradition they're working within?

These are not separate from musical composition. They are composition.




THE LINEAGE. CARSON THROUGH MAKELA THROUGH FUSEFONT TO CONTEMPORARY NOTATION

The historical lineage is not accidental. Each generation responds to and builds on the previous:

David Carson (1990s): Typography doesn't need to be clear to be meaningful. Difficulty, emotion, and visual intensity are valid goals.

P. Scott Makela (1990s-2000s): Typographic systems can operate through rules and algorithms. Constraint enables possibility. The typeface is itself a compositional object.

FUSEFONT Movement (1990s-2000s): Typefaces can be completely custom and specific. Fonts need not follow conventions. Every glyph can be treated independently. Typography is art.

Contemporary Experimental Notation (2010s-present): All of these principles apply to music notation. Custom fonts allow composers to create notational systems that are:

  • Visually expressive and emotionally intense (Carson)
  • Systematically coherent and rule-based (Makela)
  • Radically specific, beautiful, and ambiguous (FUSEFONT)

The lineage is unbroken. Typography and music notation are not separate fields. They are aspects of the same investigation into how visual form communicates meaning.



WHAT CUSTOM NOTATION FONTS ACCOMPLISH

They Make Notation Visible as Composition

When notation is custom-designed, it cannot hide behind the fiction of neutrality. Everyone can see that choices were made. The performer is immediately aware that the visual appearance is intentional, that it carries meaning, that understanding it requires active engagement.

They Expand What Notation Can Express

Conventional notation excels at encoding pitch and rhythm. It struggles with affect, context, and ambiguity. Custom fonts allow composers to encode these previously inaccessible dimensions.

They Create a Direct Relationship Between Visual Form and Musical Meaning

In Carson's typography, how something looks communicates as much as what it says. The same principle applies to notation: how a note is drawn communicates about the note itself. The visual appearance is not separate from the musical content. it is part of it.

They Honor the Performer's Intelligence

A performer encountering a custom notation font must work to understand it. This work is not a problem to be solved. It is an opportunity for deep engagement with the material. The notation says: "I trust you to understand this. I trust you to take the time."

They Create Beauty

A beautiful score is different from an ugly score. The performer feels the difference. The listener hears the difference. Graphic design matters. Typography matters. The visual beauty of notation is part of the musical beauty.


PART VII: THE EXPANDED FIELD

To design a custom notation font is to participate in a larger conversation about:

  • Typography as composition (What does graphic design express? What are fonts for?)
  • Notation as art (What can written music be? What should it communicate?)
  • Visual communication beyond language (How do forms communicate without words?)
  • The performer's experience (What does it feel like to read an unconventional score?)
  • The expansion of musical meaning (What is music notation for? What should it do?)

This conversation includes:

  • Graphic designers working with typography as expressive medium
  • Composers designing custom notations for their music
  • Performers learning to read non-standard scores
  • Music theorists reconsidering what notation encodes
  • Artists exploring how visual form and sonic form can coexist
  • Anyone asking: what can notation be beyond what it has been?

When David Carson made type illegible, he was making a philosophical claim: that clarity is not the only value, that difficulty can communicate, that typography is not neutral. When P. Scott Makela designed typefaces through algorithmic systems, he was making a philosophical claim: that rules enable creativity, that constraints are liberating, that systems can be beautiful. When the FUSEFONT movement created typefaces that violated every convention, they were making a philosophical claim: that custom design is always better than standardization, that every glyph can be an artwork, that typography is not utilitarian but artistic.

These are not design moves. They are philosophical positions. They are arguments about what design is for, what communication is, what beauty means, and what authority a designer has to challenge conventions.

In contemporary experimental notation, these philosophical positions become musical positions. A custom notation font is not decoration. It is a complete statement about what music is, what notation is, and what relationship the composer wants to create with the performer.

To design custom notation fonts is to inherit the rebellious spirit of Carson, Makela, and FUSEFONT. to refuse neutrality, to embrace constraint and complexity, to make every visual choice meaningful, and to insist that typography (and notation) can express something that cannot be expressed any other way.

This is the lineage. This is the conversation. This is what typography becomes when it enters the domain of musical composition.

This is a conversation, not a conclusion. Every custom notation font is a new contribution to this lineage. Every score designed with a custom typeface is another argument about what notation can be.


Saturday, July 4, 2026

Toponymic Notation: The City Name as Musical Instruction in Post-Conceptual Score Design

 



Toponymic Notation: The City Name as Musical Instruction in Post-Conceptual Score Design 


How the names of cities function as pitch, duration, cultural memory, and performative provocation within the expanded graphic score tradition

Look at the score page and find the word CHONGQING.

It is not labeled as a city. It is not footnoted, not explained, not situated within any cartographic context that would tell you where it sits on the earth's surface or what its relationship is to the stave running through the score's horizontal field. It is simply there, in a typeface larger than the musical notation surrounding it, its scale suggesting that it carries more weight than the accidentals floating above it and less weight than the white space consuming the right edge of the page. It occupies a specific position relative to the stave. It crosses certain lines and not others. It arrives after SAMARKAND and before CEBU CITY, and this sequence is not alphabetical, not geographical, not chronological in any system that a map or a history book would recognize.

So what is it?

The answer, or the beginning of one, is that CHONGQING in this context is a notational element. It is doing the work that notation does: it is telling a performer something about what to produce, when to produce it, and for how long. But it is doing this work through a different mechanism than the mechanism that a conventional note head uses, and understanding that difference is the point.



The Name as Pitch

Western staff notation encodes pitch through vertical position. A note sitting on the third line of a treble clef is a B. The system is elegant and precise and has served the tradition for centuries. It works because it makes a single claim: that pitch is a property of vertical position in a fixed spatial grid, and that this grid is the same for every performer reading the score.

Toponymic notation makes a different claim. The city name sits at a specific vertical position relative to the stave, and this position is not incidental. CHONGQING in one score crosses the third and fourth lines. UUMMANNAQ, in the far right of the same page, has migrated so far from the stave's gravitational field that its vertical relationship to any conventional pitch reference is unresolvable. This is not a failure of the system. It is the system. The city name's vertical position offers a pitch region rather than a pitch point, a zone of probability rather than a fixed frequency, and the performer's task is to inhabit that zone with the full understanding that its boundaries are determined by the typographic scale of the name rather than by the acoustic physics of a vibrating string.







The larger the name, the wider the zone. UUMMANNAQ fills a vertical range that spans multiple octaves of possibility. KANDY, rendered in a smaller size on an adjacent page, offers a narrower range, a more focused pitch field, a smaller aperture through which the performer's sound must pass. Scale is not decoration in toponymic notation. Scale is specification.

The Name as Duration

Conventional notation encodes duration through symbol type: a whole note lasts four beats, a half note two, a quarter note one, and the system subdivides from there with the arithmetic precision of a clock. The system presupposes that time is divisible into equal units and that the performer's task is to fit their sound into the correct unit.

City names do not fit into units. They occupy space. And in scores where the horizontal axis encodes time, the horizontal extension of a city name tells the performer how long to stay inside it.

UUMMANNAQ, nine letters in a condensed sans-serif typeface at a scale that occupies roughly a third of the score's full width, lasts longer than KANDY, four letters in a smaller typeface in the left margin. This is not a clock duration. It is a spatial duration, a duration measured in physical extension across the page rather than in seconds or beats, and its conversion into acoustic time is the performer's interpretive responsibility. Different performers will convert it differently. The score does not enforce a conversion rate. It enforces only the proportion: whatever UUMMANNAQ means in time, it means more of it than KANDY, and this proportional relationship is the compositional instruction.

What fills that time is another question. The city name does not specify pitch content, dynamic, articulation, or timbre. It specifies only that the performer is inside UUMMANNAQ for a certain amount of time, and that inside UUMMANNAQ is a different place from inside KANDY, and that the difference between those places is the difference between a city of nine hundred people on the coast of Greenland and a city of a hundred and forty thousand people in the hill country of Sri Lanka, and that this difference, cultural, climatic, linguistic, temporal, geographic, is available to the performer as compositional material if they choose to use it.

The Name as Cultural Memory

This is where toponymic notation departs most radically from every notational system that preceded it.

A conventional note head carries no cultural memory. B-natural is B-natural regardless of who plays it, where, or when. The note's meaning is exhausted by its acoustic specification. This is the source of conventional notation's power and its limitation: it can encode exactly what a sound is, and it cannot encode anything about what that sound means in the world.

City names carry nothing but cultural memory. SAMARKAND is not merely a sequence of nine letters occupying a horizontal span on a score page. It is the Silk Road. It is Tamerlane's mausoleum. It is the specific quality of light on the tilework of the Registan in the early morning. It is the idea of a city at the edge of the known world that has been rebuilt so many times by so many civilizations that its current form is an aggregate of destructions and reconstructions whose individual layers are no longer separable. It is a word that English-language poets have used for three centuries as a metonym for beautiful and distant and irretrievably other. All of this is available to a performer who knows what SAMARKAND means, and the score does not require that the performer know any of it, and the score produces a fundamentally different performance from a performer who knows all of it than from one who does not.

This is the productive instability of toponymic notation. The score encodes more information than any performer can fully decode, and the excess of information is not a problem to be solved but a condition to be inhabited. The city names are not puzzles. They are environments. The performer moves through them the way a traveler moves through a city: noticing some things, missing others, constructing a route that is personal and provisional and would have been different on a different day or with a different set of prior experiences.

The sequence of city names within a single score page is itself a compositional argument. ARCATA before LUCKNOW before SAMARKAND before CHONGQING before CEBU CITY before BATON ROUGE before UUMMANNAQ is not a random sequence. It is a journey whose logic is not geographic but associative, tonal, temperamental, rhythmic in its alternation of the familiar and the foreign, the small and the large, the pronounceable and the resistant. The performer who reads this sequence and feels nothing about the transition from BATON ROUGE to UUMMANNAQ has not yet understood what kind of score they are reading.

The Name as Performative Provocation

There is a harder argument embedded in toponymic notation that the preceding analysis has approached but not directly stated.

When a composer places MAE HONG SON or GYEONGJU or FISHGUARD in a score alongside microtonal accidentals drawn from Ben Johnston and the Sagittal system and fragments of a playing card and a dissected form from a natural history engraving, they are making a claim about what counts as musical material. They are saying that the specific acoustic history of a city in northern Thailand, or the specific ceramic heritage of a Korean city whose name most Western performers will encounter for the first time in this score, is as legitimate a source of compositional material as the just intonation tuning system developed by an American composer in Illinois, or the historical accidental symbols developed in European Renaissance music theory.

This claim is not stated. It does not need to be stated. It is enacted by the placement of the names on the page, by their scale, by their position relative to the stave, by the absence of any explanation or footnote that would hierarchize them as exotic or supplementary relative to the Western notational elements they coexist with. The city names are not illustrations of the music. They are the music. Their coexistence with microtonal accidentals and playing cards and dice is a compositional argument about what music is and where it comes from and whose cultural memory it carries.

A performer who has been to Mae Hong Son knows something that a performer who has not been there does not know, and the score offers that knowledge as a source of material without requiring its use. A performer who has never heard of Gyeongju can locate it in ten seconds on a phone and discover that it was the capital of the Silla kingdom for a thousand years and is now a city of two hundred and fifty thousand people surrounded by burial mounds, and this discovery, made in the act of preparing a performance, is already a performative act, already inside the piece, already changing what the performer brings to the stave and the accidentals and the dice.

The city name provokes research. The research produces knowledge. The knowledge enters the performance. The performance carries the city into the acoustic space of a concert hall or a gallery or a room where no one expected to hear Mae Hong Son mentioned, and for the duration of the performance, Mae Hong Son is there.

The Sequence as Argument

Return to the score pages and look at both sequences together.

Page one: ARCATA, LUCKNOW, SAMARKAND, CHONGQING, CEBU CITY, BATON ROUGE, UUMMANNAQ.

Page two: KANDY, STRUGA, FISHGUARD, PETOSKEY, GYEONGJU, CEDAR RAPIDS, MAE HONG SON.

These are not random cities. They are not the largest cities in the world, or the most famous, or the most frequently cited in Western cultural production. They are cities chosen for their acoustic properties as words, their cultural weight as places, their position in the sequence relative to what precedes and follows them, and the specific quality of the distance they represent: not geographical distance from the performer's location, but cultural and linguistic distance from the Western notational tradition within which the score is otherwise operating.

Petoskey, Michigan and Mae Hong Son, Thailand are not equivalent as cities. They are equivalent as notational elements within this score, and that equivalence is itself a compositional statement: that a small resort town on the northern shore of Lake Michigan and a provincial capital in the mountains of northwestern Thailand occupy the same position in the score's system of values, which is to say that the score's system of values does not reproduce the global hierarchy of cultural importance that places New York and London at the center and everywhere else at varying distances from it.

This is toponymic notation's deepest provocation. It does not argue for this position. It enacts it. Every performance of a score containing these city names in this sequence is, whether the performer intends it or not, a performance of a world in which Struga and UUMMANNAQ are as compositionally significant as any pitch in the equal-tempered chromatic scale.

The stave runs through the middle of that world. The accidentals float above it. The dice and the playing cards sit at its edges. And the city names hold the whole thing open, refusing to let the score close into a single meaning, insisting that the world outside the page is inside the music, insisting that where you have been and where you have never been are both available as material, insisting that the distance between CEDAR RAPIDS and MAE HONG SON is not a problem to be solved but a space to be sounded.


Sound Morphology is an ongoing investigation into the edges of compositional thinking.

Continuation - Work in Progress for Guitar






These two pages stage the guitar not as an instrument to be sounded, but as an unstable architecture of signs, pressures, apertures, and inhabited surfaces. The score behaves less like a linear prescription than like an archaeological section: a cut through notation, urbanism, Pop mechanics, and the residual memory of the hand. What appears first as a page is, in fact, a site.

In the first page, the traditional staff is still present, but it has been made precarious. It stretches horizontally with the authority of inherited musical grammar, yet its continuity is repeatedly invaded, occluded, and re-territorialized by graphic matter. The circular image at the center, surrounded by the yellow field, functions like a planetary module, a diagrammatic city, or a wound in the notation. The guitar line passes through it as if through infrastructure. Notes, beams, tuplets, arrows, verbal triggers, and architectural fragments become mutually contaminating systems. The score no longer separates musical action from visual pressure. It insists that sound is also construction, and that construction is also damage.

The perimeter imagery, derived from dense architectural drawing, gives the page the quality of an urban enclosure. The guitar is placed inside a megastructure of information. The performer is not simply reading from left to right, but navigating a pressured field in which notation becomes scaffolding, housing, traffic, debris. The yellow circle is not decorative. It is a signal zone, an energy field, a flare. It frames the collision between musical syntax and architectural excess. The word “PRESS,” hovering in fragile color above the staff, becomes both instruction and condition: pressure of finger against string, pressure of image against notation, pressure of history against the present page.

The second page opens the system further. Here the musical staff has disappeared, or rather has been displaced into a broader semiotic environment. The central circular collage is now set inside a blue halo, no longer merely inserted into notation but installed as an object of attention. It resembles a control disk, a city core, a mnemonic device, a portable theater of operations. Around it, rows of linear, fan-like structures unfold symmetrically, as if the page itself were breathing through ribbed architectural lungs. The surrounding glyphs, isolated in circular frames, operate like alternate clefs, pressure marks, ritual signs, or technical emblems from an invented performance culture.

What is striking is the refusal of hierarchy. Conventional notation, graphic score, architectural collage, Pop chromatics, handwritten pressure signs, and symbolic devices all occupy the same plane. There is no stable foreground. The performer must decide what is primary, what is residual, what is atmospheric, and what is actionable. In this sense, the score proposes not obedience but negotiation. It transforms the guitarist into an interpreter of systems, a reader of ruins, a technician of sensation.

The Archigram-like imagery is crucial. It introduces a language of modularity, plug-in inhabitation, and speculative urban density, but here it is compressed into the intimate space of solo guitar. The instrument becomes a miniature city. Strings become circulation lines. Finger pressure becomes urban stress. Harmonics, attacks, silences, and gestures become inhabitants moving through a temporary structure. The guitar is no longer an object held by the body. It is an environment the body enters.

These pages also preserve an important tension between precision and excess. The staff notation is highly specific, even severe. The graphic fields are exuberant, saturated, and spatially unruly. This creates a productive contradiction: the performer is held between the discipline of execution and the intoxication of visual abundance. The work asks whether musical rigor can coexist with a visual culture of overload. It answers not by resolving the problem, but by making that instability the real subject of the score.

The score’s most radical proposition may be its treatment of time. Traditional notation organizes time as sequence. These pages disturb that linearity. The circular forms, architectural fragments, symbolic satellites, and repeated pressure commands create a sense of simultaneity. Time becomes architectural rather than merely temporal. It is something one passes through, something one inhabits, something that presses back.

As a work in progress for solo guitar, these pages suggest a music of friction: between hand and string, eye and page, structure and impulse, notation and image, discipline and collapse. The result is not an illustrated score, but a score-object. It occupies the space between composition, drawing, diagram, and installation. It asks the performer not only to play, but to enter a constructed field of signs and emerge with sound as evidence.


 

Friday, July 3, 2026

Notation as Spatial Resistance

 

Cardew

Notation as Spatial Resistance

When notation becomes spatial, it becomes political.


Not because a new symbol set suddenly carries an overt message, but because the conditions of reading... of time, attention, labor, and bodies in space are reconfigured. The linear staff presumes a single horizon of time; the spatial score collapses that horizon, thickens it, makes it topological. What had been a conveyor belt becomes a site. In that shift, the score resists extraction, resists quick consumption, resists the fantasy that music can be frictionlessly converted into product.

Against the Hegemony of the Line

Classical notation maps sound onto a left-to-right timeline: meter regularizes, the barline segments, and performance becomes a logistics problem attemoting to deliver events on schedule. That linearity, perfected across centuries of printing and pedagogy, is also an ideology of standardization. It presumes interchangeability of parts (pages, players, rehearsals), favors excerptability (movements, arias, highlights), and greases the mechanisms of repertoire, publishing, and recording. The score’s success is measured by how efficiently it disappears into performance.

Spatial notation interrupts this regime. It treats the page as field rather than railway.  It evolves as a map to be navigated, a relief to be explored, a diagram whose meaning emerges only through positional decisions. Time is inferred from distance, density, or proximity; attention must swivel, backtrack, zoom. The page no longer disappears in the act of playing. It insists on being seen.

From Instruction to Object

Spatial scores transform notation from a set of imperatives (“do this, then this”) into an object of engagement.  They are stubborn, coded, noncompliant. Their politics lies in the demands they make:

  • Unpredictability: the refusal of a single, pre-optimized path.

  • Excess: more information than can be performed at once; layers that force choice.

  • Unreadability: not as incompetence, but as opacity; as a shield against instant capture, summary, or excerpt.

These are not scores that “serve” performance; they coerce it into negotiation. Reading becomes rehearsal; rehearsal becomes research. The performer is no longer a relay in a supply chain but an archaeologist excavating a site of meaning.

Art-Historical Lineages

Ruscha


Spatial notation does not arise ex nihilo; it sits within a broader art history in which the document, the book, and the instruction are reimagined as art objects.

“Thick Channel Black Bourbon” for Solo Voice


Curatorial Stakes: How to Exhibit a Score

Exhibitions frequently neutralize scores by treating them as illustrations for performances that “really matter.” Spatial notation resists this instrumentalization. To curate such works responsibly is to adopt three positions:

  1. Objecthood without fetish: Acknowledge the material presence.  The graphite pressure, the bleed of ink, the palimpsest of erasures without freezing the score as a relic. Display should enable legibility of use: fold-outs, layered pages, overhead views that reveal structure.

  2. Performances derived from the score are not footnotes; they are parallel artifacts. Present recordings, rehearsals, reader’s annotations, and failed attempts as equally valuable outcomes of the score’s provocative difficulty.

  3. Situate spatial scores alongside artist’s books, conceptual instructions, and archival practices to articulate the cross-media politics at stake. Place LeWitt near Cardew; Ruscha beside Xenakis. Let visitors trace the migration of instruction into object, object into event.

Tactics of Spatial Resistance



Spatial notation deploys a set of tactics that function as resistance within contemporary economies of attention:

  • Non-excerptability: Forms that cannot be cleanly sliced into “greatest hits.” This resists playlist culture and the extractive tendencies of programming and streaming.

  • Distributed authorship: By leaving pathways open, the score shares power with performers. The composer becomes framer rather than dictator; interpretation becomes a site of collective authorship.

  • Temporal thickening: Spatial scores consume rehearsal time, demand collective decision-making, and institutional support. In a gig economy that prizes instant legibility, this insistence on slowness is a political refusal.

  • Illegibility as ethics: Where surveillance capitalism thrives on legibility and frictionless parsing, the score’s opacity becomes an ethical stance.  It exists as a defense against reductive capture (by OCR, by MIDI quantization, by the “explain it in 30 seconds” mandate).

Reading as Embodied Cartography

Spatial scores reallocate cognitive load from counting to wayfinding. Players triangulate position through landmarks (clusters, textures, color), agreeing on cues more like orienteers than metronomes. This produces a politics of mutual dependence: the ensemble must listen and look to stay together; hierarchy (conductor vs. section) is less prescriptive, more conversational. The room matters because the score exists at scale, not as an abstract stream of tokens.



The Archaeology of Performance

To perform a spatial score is to handle an archive: marginalia, legends, failed drafts, overlays, alternative routes. Each realization leaves residue which, in turn, become part of the next reading. The work accretes as a stratigraphy rather than a definitive text. Performance becomes archaeology not only metaphorically but operationally: a careful process of brush, brush, reveal.

Risk, Responsibility, Repair

Because spatial notation withdraws guarantees, it exposes performers and institutions to risk: of misunderstanding, of “getting it wrong,” of spending more rehearsal than a budget allows. But this risk has a politics: it creates a space where responsibility (to the page, to one another, to the audience) is renegotiated. The work’s difficulty is not punitive; it is repairing.  It presents as an antidote to the culture of instant adequacy. It teaches how to read slowly, together.



Toward a Curatorial Lexicon

For curators, educators, and performers working with spatial scores, a practical lexicon helps sustain the politics of the form:

  • Field (not line): Describe pages as terrains with gradients and borders.

  • Legend (not key): Allow the notation’s symbols to remain locally defined, historically contingent.

  • Route (not part): Prepare versions as navigational proposals rather than fixed parts.

  • Residue (not documentation): Treat recordings and annotations as layers that thicken the work.

  • Commons (not property): Encourage shared mark-ups, communal copies, open ateliers where reading is social.

Conclusion: The Demand of the Page

Spatial notation is not a stylistic novelty; it is an infrastructure for different kinds of relations...to time, to institutions, to audiences, to each other. By dislodging the score from linear service and reinstating it as object, field, and site, artists reclaim the terms of musical encounter. The result is not a rejection of sound but a reorganization of attention: away from efficient delivery toward committed reading; away from commodity toward commons; away from the invisible score toward a page that looks back and says, simply, engage.