

Image by European Graduate School, via Wikimedia Commons
French post-structuralist philosopher/sociologist Jean Baudrillard—usually identified along with his submitmodern theories of simulacra—is a little little bit of a fringe figure in pop culture. Recognized to hip academic varieties and avant-garde-ists, he’s perhaps the form of thinker who will get name-dropped greater than learn (and he’s no straightforward learn).
However within the audio clip above, Baudrillard reads to us, from his poetry no much less, whereas backed by the swirling summary sounds of The Probability Band, an all art-star ensemble featuring Tom Watson (of The Missingmen), George Hurley (of The Minutemales and fIREHOSE), Lynn Johnston, Dave Muller, Amy Stoll, and visitor vocalist, theorist Allucquère Rosanne (“Sandy”) Stone. It’s an odd, one-time, assemblage of artists and thinkers UbuWeb describes as “unbelievready however true!”:
Reported stay as a part of the Probability Festival at Whiskey Pete’s Casino in Stateline Nevada, 1996. You’ve never heard Baudrillard like this earlier than! Music to learn Nietzsche to.
Certainly. The monitor above is number two on a twelve-track album referred to as Suicide Moi, launched in 2002 by Compound Annex Information. You may buy the CD here or stream and download individual tracks for free on UbuWeb.
Related Content:
Avant-Garde Media: The UbuWeb Collection
Derrida: A 2002 Documentary on the Abstract Philosopher and the Everyday Man
Josh Jones is a author, editor, and musician primarily based in Washington, DC. Follow him @jdmagness