And so, a year and change later, on a particularly damp night in May, I was slumped on the the living room couch, where I typically landed when I found myself working too long. Whenever I had kept the bass thumping for hours, with the analog graphics dancing across the screen eventually looking like nothing a but a bundle of jerking, tousled striations, like a lie-detector needle gone wild — that's when I'd drop down there to rest. Sinking into its leathery depths, which comfortably embraced the whole of my body, felt like connecting to a brain-clearing machine; I got a soft calming sensation that let me review the fruits of that day's work, then joyfully, even impatiently, greet the prospect of doing it all over again upon waking the next day.
But this time, I was there to temper palpitations brought on by too much coke.
— from Superstars, by Ann Scott.
Sometimes I wonder about the '90s. That decade coincides with my 20s. I drank a lot. Although many of those years are a blur, I didn't quite achieve the carefree abandon I strove for. I lived alone and asserted my independence (until I met a man and settled down, and didn't). I started to travel (until I met a man, and didn't). I had a government job, until I quit because I thought I could do something more interesting, like I deserved something less soul-sucking.
I sidestepped the grunge scene. Instead, I explored my roots and listened to Polish crooners. I explored the world and listened to fado, ranchera, gypsy, klezmer. I explored inwards and listened to Leonard Cohen and Carlos Gardel. I sidestepped the Spice Girls too. Occasionally, we smoked pot.
I went to just one bonafide rave (it was early days still, was it even actually 1990 yet?), boarding a bus to a secret warehouse location. But house parties with DJs (acid house parties?). And somehow, I knew what clubs to go to. (Even in Lisbon, in Paris, somehow I knew what clubs to go to.) And still, I went to shows: from Psychic TV (1990) to FM Einheit (1998).
At decade's end, I was working in advertising. We drank martinis in lounges and listened to Moby. It would be another 20 years before I tried MDMA.
I feel like there was another 90s, a secret 90s, a bigger, fuller, sexier 90s, I caught glimpses of it through the grunge, but I didn't give the right password, I couldn't find the right door.
Maybe now, the 2020s, maybe this is my rave era. The books and the movies. I want to rave in sunlight on THC. I want to rave with Harry Styles (DJs don't dance no more, they sit) and with Bjork during an eclipse.
Superstars, by Ann Scott, (published in French in 2000,) recounts the rave days of turn-of-the-century Paris through the eyes of a 30-ish-year-old electronic DJ, who sometimes regrets having set aside her rock-and-roll bass-guitar days and the boyfriend around which they revolved for a queerer lifestyle. It's a litany of unoriginal bad girl behaviour. (It came as no surprise to learn that Ann Scott once shared an apartment with Virginie Despentes.)
A shattering burst of Aphex Twin's laughter exploded once, twice, and then abruptly dropped out, catching everyone by surprise, a tremendous surge of percussion, with a single cry rising from the crowd, the sudden realization that this was going to kill. The strobes came back, accelerating the movements all around me, instantly altering my perception of how far I was from everyone else. My feet were keeping time, my head following the sound. Loops overlapped, unfolded, weaved all kinds of structures, infinite trails, and my brain wanted follow them all, one after the other. One second the accent was up, and the next the accent was down. The inversions jolted me, twisted me around, brought me back up. On giant screens, spirals morphed to match the sonic whirlwind. I looked at my undulating hands as they opened and closed. My arms were now extensions of the rest of my body, first up and then down and then up again, whipping like cables, and my eager eyes were soaking it all in. Everything around me seemed a little clearer, a little more dazzling. Twinkling eyebrow rings, nose rings, earrings, beads of sweat on foreheads, water drops from drinks pearling on chins, gazing deeply, unbridled, into all their faces. All ecstatic to be there, in this strange place that they'd invaded for one night only. All transported by the magic of Total Music, by the lights and the crowd,
There's a lot of drugs. There's a record deal advance, so even more drugs, and other financial irresponsibilities. A lot of petty jealousies and emotional immaturity, all heightened no doubt because of the lack of sleep, and all the drugs. The characters spend more time anticipating the raving and enduring the aftermath of raving than actually raving (maybe this is how it is in real life). It's mostly chaos and self-destruction.
It took me a long time to find the rhythm of this book, to care what happened, to get past the unlikeable narrator. I was well past the halfway point when I gave myself over to it — like when you're dragged to a party with no way home, just have a drink and enjoy the music (of which there was very little). Although the narrator, surprisingly, demonstrated some emotional growth, the end could not come quickly enough for me. Superstars documents a precise moment in space-time with a particular drug-fuelled energy, but it's not stellar prose.
(Ann Scott in interview sounds set in her ways, with some archaic views on sexual consent, and definite opinions about the boring state of literature in France. Millennials aren't writing books, she says. Maybe it's true. However, literary experimentation is dead thanks to capitalism, she says — this I believe.)
Behind, above, around: enormous now, the supremacies of sound had risen up, giant machines, bigger than a person, that shot thunder through to his insides. He looked up, nodded, and felt like an idea borne of the boom-boom-boom of the beat. And the immense boom-boom said: one one one —
and one and one and —
one one one —
and —
cool cool cool cool cool...
He saw Hardy and Leksie, faces and eyes, hurtles, scrambled, shoved, shaken in the midst of the rhythm. Saw broken and blessed, trusting and tender, myriad signs, quick, terse, plain, each blotted out by the next in waves of sympathy. He looked and danced and saw beauty.
From the margins came legs and light, feet, flashes, paces and bass, surfaces and murmurs, equivalencies and functions of a higher mathematics.
He himself was the music.
Then there was a quick cascade of steps, almost tumbling, somehow, from within the rhythms and sounds.
A cascade of nouns,
pertaining to the curtailment and velocity of thoughts correlated to music, with that feeling of contrary facets in aggregate, with the total mental perspective in this moment of simultaneity and the solace of the automaticity of internal processes.
In this direction there would —
A sort of equipoise of contradictions, which without —
And overwrought —
So time, processes, remained intact then. And the conceptual union of opposites: like how before the creation of the world, the so-called spirit of God...
But that, alas, is unthinkable.
And he saw that it was good.
— from Rave, by Rainald Goetz.In contrast, Rave, by Rainald Goetz, (published in German in 1998,) feels like drugs. Not in a "can't put it down" way. Goetz's prose magically mimics the experience of being on drugs. It is not always a pleasant experience, it is often confusing and overwhelming, an overstimulating barrage of words that are simultaneously noise and texture and philosophy. Time passes and stands still. It's a testament to his craft, I would stop midsentence, midparagraph, and let it roll over me, I would roll in it, I was rolling, in awe.
Rave was exhausting and beautiful, but possibly pointless. Interestingly, I found there to be more familiar cultural markers in Goetz's German setting than Scott's French one. Rave's narrator is self-reflective and philosophical, aware of the context he finds himself in, alert to the cultural moment.
The difficulty was a fundamental one: how would a text about our lives have to sound? I had a sort of inkling of sound inside me, a bodily sensation that writing had to articulate.
a kind of: Ave —
[...]
You couldn't get the text by just starting with the meaning, it had to be conceived differently, through prayer, through the endless iterative pronunciation of the words with the mouth, becoming as it were part of the words oneself by speaking.
The language is playful; situations are funny, and how the drug-addled mind processes them is funny. The critique of Kraftwerk's stage presence is funny. This review indicates layers of sonic references and suggests why a reunified Germany might be ripe for this musical subculture. "The others were dancing their acid-truth-dance on the alp."
Rave excerpt.
Reckless as it might have been, at the same time this experience was yearning to understand itself. And yet wanting at the same moment to forget itself again, to destroy understanding, to have some new experience reveal that understanding to be nonsense invalidated through novelty, tumult, coolness.
I approached both of these works more as artefacts than as entertainment. Part of me hoped for some insight into the what life looked like for a handful of acquaintances and peers who hail from Western Europe. (How mainstream was rave culture? Do I gravitate toward hedonists?) Mostly, these novels have confirmed the rave experience as something distant and foreign and not nearly as cool as it ought to be.
Below, the men sit and smoke. Above, the young women stand there with their faces.








