MUSICAL
TRANSFORMATIONS
Today's world is a
curious, even bizarre, mixture of the old and the new, the naturalistic and the
synthetic. It is very much a
transitional age, an age in which progress away from dualism is becoming
manifest in numerous different contexts, not least of all music. We have grown so accustomed to the
incongruities resulting from the co-existence of ancient and modern ... that we
tend, in spite of ourselves, to take them for granted. Take, for example, the distinction between
symphony orchestras and rock groups, a distinction which reflects class
differences as much as anything. The
orchestral performers, with their bow ties, black suits, acoustic instruments,
scores, and conductor, obviously appertain to a very different musical world
from the, for example, T-shirted, jean-wearing rock groups whose electric
instruments would be capable of drowning out any orchestra in a competition
designed to discover who could make the most noise or, at any rate, create the
greater volume of decibels. The orchestra
clearly appertains to the bourgeois, semi-naturalistic world in which acoustic
instruments are taken for granted, whereas the rock group is comparatively
proletarian, given their electric instruments of a largely synthetic
construction. The two worlds exist
side-by-side, occasionally overlapping but, for the most part, remaining
distinct - the rock group preferring, as a rule, to evolve further and further
away from classical musicians who, as often as not, remain tied to the
nineteenth century, if not to several previous centuries. How long, one wonders, can this paradoxical
state-of-affairs continue?
My guess is that it won't continue very much longer, since
evolution cannot be reversed or impeded for ever! The life-span of the symphony orchestra would
seem to be drawing towards a close, although its final collapse may not be for
several years yet - certainly not before the second-half of the new
century. Whatever happens between the
capitalist West and the socialist East in the historical unfolding of our world
over the coming decades, I cannot envisage symphony orchestras outlasting the
twenty-first century. Even today, with
computers, rockets, colour televisions, laser beams, holographs, microchips,
supersonic jets, and other such late twentieth- and/or early twenty-first
century phenomena, the orchestra appears increasingly out-of-place, a sort of
acoustic anachronism in an electronic age.
The bowing or blowing or banging of acoustic instruments contrasts sharply
with the latest push-button techniques in the manipulation of the most
up-to-date electronic instruments, and one cannot help but feel that whereas
the latter are very much an integral part of modern life, the former resemble
social dinosaurs in their remoteness from it!
Naturally, works for symphony orchestra continue to be
composed, but even the most avant-garde compositions are unlikely to be
performed beyond the twenty-first century.
If these comparatively modern works outlast the orchestra, it will be
because they have been recorded to disc or tape, and thus preserved for
posterity. The actual performance
life-span of these works can only, in the face of evolutionary pressures, be
short - far shorter, I would imagine, than the performance life-span enjoyed by
the works of Beethoven, Mozart, and Bach.
For as evolution progresses in the modern age, so it becomes ever
quicker, and consequently the likelihood of Walton or Honegger
or Prokofiev still being regularly performed well into the new century can only
be increasingly remote. This is one
reason why a contemporary composer who makes the grade is quickly acknowledged
with international success and recording fame, his music soon to take its place
beside the 'immortal' recordings of a whole galaxy of illustrious
predecessors. A Tippett
recording is already somehow part of the musical tradition, and Walton is now
regarded as virtually one of the 'old masters', to be placed alongside the
immortals. Simply to have been recorded
is confirmation of one's 'classic' status.
And, given the likelihood of the classical orchestra's impending demise,
a delay in recording a modern composer could well prove fatal - depriving
posterity of access to his works.
But if orchestral concerts are unlikely to be an aspect of
twenty-first-century life, the same must surely hold true of jazz concerts and,
indeed, the recording of modern jazz.
The electric guitar may be a relatively new instrument, peculiar to the
second-half of the twentieth century, but we need not expect it to outlive the
symphony orchestra by a great many years, since it has already become part of a
long musical tradition within the swiftly-evolving context of modern life. Doubtless some form of electric music will
continue to be composed and performed during the twenty-first century, but the
instruments and instrumental combinations will probably change, as new tastes
and evolutionary pressures dictate. The
possibility that modern jazz will merge with atonal electronic music, over the
coming decades, cannot be ruled out, since the latter seems destined to
supplant serious acoustic music and will doubtless undergo progressive
modifications in the course of time.
Eventually all music should be composed on the highest possible
evolutionary level, which means that even pop music will be transcended as
society increasingly becomes more transcendentally sophisticated overall, not
just within certain sections of the population.
Pop music, arguably the musical equivalent of socialist realism in art,
may be necessary and even commendable in a transitional age like this, but it
must eventually be eclipsed by a more spiritual music, equivalent to
transcendentalism in art, if an ultimate civilization, classless and universal,
is to come fully to pass.
One reason why recordings of whatever type of music are
beginning to supplant live performances ... is that they make for a superior
means of listening to music, in which a perfect instrumental balance can be
obtained at a volume suitable to oneself and in the comfort of one's home. The use of headphones can further enhance
one's appreciation of music by seeming to interiorize it, and one is of course
free to select exactly the right recordings for one's particular taste or
mood. It may be that in improving the technical
aspect of musical appreciation in this solitary fashion, one is obliged to
forfeit the social advantages accruing to a public concert, in which a large
audience comes to share the same enthusiasm, and, doubtless, studio recordings
will never be able to match live concerts for atmosphere. Yet, even then, the advantages of recorded
music are too great to warrant serious criticism, and reflect the ongoing
spiritualization of art through sublimated means of appreciation. The fact that recordings
tend, paradoxically, to undermine the musical necessity or validity of live
performances, whether by orchestra or group, cannot be denied, and is a further
reason why the latter will eventually die out. When, exactly, the last public performance
will be, I cannot of course say. But a
world tending ever more rapidly towards the post-Human Millennium, and thus
towards the complete dominion of being over doing, won't require people to
perform in public for ever. Better that
we should just sit still, in the comfort of our homes, and listen to the latest
studio recordings at an appropriately transcendent remove from the actual
recording session!