Art & Language sing theory, backed up by The Red Crayola "Nine Gross and 
Conspicuous Errors" (1976): http://is.gd/1Mhe99

The karaoke event took place between 5pm and 6pm each day, and tracks 
from the album Kangaroo? (1981), such as ‘A Portrait of V. I. Lenin in 
the Style of Jackson Pollock’ were available to sing along to. Another 
‘gross and conspicuous error’ started to operate here, but this time the 
question appeared to be, what kind of historical displacement occurs 
when we the spectators, as blind performers, sing these 24-year-old 
lyrics? As before, we are complicit in our own bad performance and 
misreading of these essay-like texts and through a historical distance 
provide a necessary misinterpretation of Art & Language’s work. This is 
an essential component of the group’s practice, and if they represent a 
resistance to the category of Conceptual art, where a Duchampian model 
is ‘emptied of its transgressive potential and rendered congenial to the 
managers of interdisciplinarity’, then maybe this combination of music 
and politics is something to strive for. If the original intention of 
these irreconcilable forces was to ‘stress the grammar and the sense of 
the text to the point of oblivion’, then through the lens of history 
this partnership at least still appears alien and strange, but for 
different reasons. When current bands are mimicking the urgency of 
outfits from the late 1970s, minus the political awareness, and younger 
artists and curators are fixated on radical models but lacking any real 
substance, there’s another, unwitting form of historical karaoke 
operating. Perhaps what we need right now are more deliberately 
irresponsible yet ‘real’ collaborations of this sort."
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