ABSTRACT

Listening, understood as an active or synthetic production of auditory experience rather than a passive reception of external events, was a central concern for the composer Maryanne Amacher, whose work this chapter focuses on. Her work had a distinctly transcendental orientation indicating not a movement beyond but rather, in a Kantian sense, a movement towards the conditions of experience. Amacher’s work has been described as containing “psychedelic sonorities”, so this chapter details the way Amacher’s work might be understood to construct a transcendental psychedelia that explores the limits and conditions of auditory experience. To do so, a dialogue is established between Amacher’s compositional thought and methods and Gilles Deleuze’s transcendental empiricism. It is also argued that Amacher’s methods and processes have a wider significance for contemporary scholarship on sound in the arts and experimental music. Despite the distinctly affective and embodied orientation of much of her work, Amacher’s research and compositional methods present a challenge to some forms of materialism active within this field of study through her use of methodological abstraction, representation, modelling and formalisation. It is argued that by attending to not only the sensations produced by Amacher’s work but also her wider artistic practice, compositional thought and methods of production, we might enhance the scope and subtlety of the materialist and realist orientations in contemporary scholarship.