“…It suggests that maybe what is really important is not the semantic meaning of the lyrics, but their affectivity, their relations of speed and slowness, the way they are moved around the jaw, or warbled in the mouth, or slipped under the tongue, or chuckled or chortled or rambled or whispered. This method of singing has an affinity to the ‘destratified voice’ that Laura Cull (2009, p. 245) locates in Antonin Artaud's 1947 radio play, To Have Done with the Judgment of God , a ‘voice that escapes from signification into incantation’. However, while Cull sees Artaud's speech as a way to ‘enter into proximity with the madwoman who speaks only to her selves, or to the wolf that howls at the moon’ (Cull 2009, p. 249) – in other words, as instances of becoming-mad or becoming-animal – I would suggest that in the case of pop-rock music, this ‘destratified voice’ is usually produced through a becoming-child, though, as I have noted earlier, there are numerous instances of becoming-animal as well.…”