About this item
Highlights
- In Listenings, Weiss "listens to the world breathing" in this insightful, often humorous, personal journey.
- Author(s): Jason Weiss
- 268 Pages
- Poetry, General
Description
About the Book
"What is that silence, and doesn't every silence have its own nature? But then the cricks and creaks of this wooden house emerge, so infrequent they're barely noticeable. Is there a breeze outside? No clattering of the tall shrubs beneath the window. Like peering into the dark until vague forms become distinguishable, your sustained attention gathers in reports of movement, of forms not colliding but touching gently"--Book Synopsis
In Listenings, Weiss "listens to the world breathing" in this insightful, often humorous, personal journey. These adventures in listening to music (iconic Woodstock, live concerts, on the radio), nature, sounds in the bedroom, in the body, on the street, language in translation, overheard conversations, strangers and loved ones, living and dead, immerses readers in a smart, surprising, and timely exploration of the ways we listen to the world and ourselves.
Review Quotes
Jason Weiss' Listenings is a true "Ars Auditoria" (you heard right, reader, I am making it rhyme with Ovid's "Ars Amatoria"), thus a treatise on the art of listening & simultaneously a love letter to music & all sound(ing)s. A very practical treatise based on the author's life-long involvement with this often neglected art-yes, we all "hear" but do we really know how to "listen," a very different activity? These immanentist autobiographical prose meditations concentrate not so much on what's between our ears (though that also impinges), but rather on what comes to our ears & how these-& the rest of our body/mind-can process such audio-event inputs. Indeed, we are most alive, can learn & experience most deeply if we can consciously open up to & experience the nomadic in-between of world & self, as mediated by the art of listening.
Listenings is a gathering of writings that speak not only to Weiss' life-long passion for music ( & well beyond the eleven "Concertgoing" sections) but also reflect on his insights into work as interviewer ("By listening to an/other you become an/other for them; and so, together, you may understand you are the same"), as translator, as walker, as writer, as radio listener ("An invitation to not believe your eyes"), as sleeper ("The unconscious listens by its own lights, and always profits from its finds") & as everyday passenger in this world.
Trust the author of Listenings when he declares that "see, listen, hear" for him became "see, listen, hear, write." Indeed, as Weiss puts it, "listening is a form of travel" & that is so because "first it sends us dreaming." Listening opens up truly unknown & unsuspected areas as it gives us the "opportunity to notice a heartbeat where we never guessed."
Pierre Joris, author of Always the Many, Never the One
In Cloud Therapy, Jason Weiss described how a physical activity, swimming, transformed and opened up the way he was able to understand, and see, and hear, and feel the shards of the world that surrounds him. Through his modest first-person singular narrative, the reader was also invited to engage differently with the rest of the world through our everyday activities. In Listenings, he explores the more universal physical activities of hearing and listening. Whether or not these activities are voluntary or self-aware, Weiss describes and notates how they engage with and allow us to understand, and misunderstand, our own bodies, our relationship to things, to the night, to our memories, to our neighbors, to the contours of communication and miscommunication, to music, to what we understand as life. He invites us to consider whether we hear our lovers' bodies through our hands. Though listening to music is not really its prime focus, I'd swear that there's more information about understanding and living music in this book than in most of the books specifically written about music.
Kip Hanrahan
In Listenings, Weiss "listens to the world breathing" in this insightful, often humorous, personal journey. These adventures in listening to music (iconic Woodstock, live concerts, on the radio), nature, sounds in the bedroom, in the body, on the street, language in translation, overheard conversations, strangers and loved ones, living and dead, immerses readers in a smart, surprising, and timely exploration of the ways we listen to the world and ourselves.
Shay Youngblood, author of Black Girl in Paris