The ORIGINAL The Residents: Jay Clem, John Kennedy, Homer Flynn (aka N Senada), Miss Peggy Honeydew, Hardy Fox
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The ORIGINAL The Residents: Jay Clem, John Kennedy, Homer Flynn (aka N Senada), Miss Peggy Honeydew, Hardy Fox
Just another Monday night at the Nightclub.
YOU DECIDE!
Theory Of Obscurity - Creating For Yourself The Residents may be the world's most famous unknown band. No one knows who is actually in the band, they disguise their face with giant eyeballs or other disguises, and their music is not designed to appeal to everyone. In fact, it is purposely composed to appeal only to them. They developed their interesting way of looking at the world through the theories of (possibly fictional) Bavarian composer N. Senada. The theory, as stated in this Wired article, goes as follows. "According to this philosophy, artists do their purest work in obscurity, with minimum feedback from any kind of audience. The theory adds that with no audience to consider, artists are free to create work that is true to their own vision. " I bring this to your attention because it led The Residents to try an interesting exercise. They decided for this theory to truly operate, they would have to create music that was not intended to be heard by anyone. They recorded an album that there were going to lock away in a vault until they forgot about it. Eventually, during a dispute with their label, it was released under the name Not Available. I remember a woman in a poetry class I took years ago. She was so desperate for an audience and so fearful of a negative reaction, that she would write poems, tear them out of her notebook and abandon them on park benches and buses. She hoped that someone would find them and be touched in some way. She would sit in class and cross out negative things in her poems because she was afraid people would like them less. I was often left wondering what she actually thought, because all she wrote was what she thought I wanted to read. Creating for no audience with the intention of locking something away may be just what you need to spur yourself onwards. If nothing else, forgetting an audience will let you push yourself into areas you might not be comfortable with. It will let you bring up ideas and thoughts that you not otherwise consider for fear of being judged. Use the Theory of Obscurity in the spirit in which it is intended. It only matters while you are creating. Afterwards, if someone does see it, it doesn't compromise the initial process.
David Wahl (2007) from Creative Creativity: Inspiration and Tools for Creativity