MUSICAL
EVOLUTION
Professor Burke
listened in silence to the Shostakovich symphony he was playing on his stereo
before asking me, as if in need of reassurance: "Do you listen to much
orchestral music yourself these days, Justin?"
"Yes," I replied, glad of an opportunity to speak
again. "Although
I tend to listen to as much Modern Jazz in the evenings - always using
headphones instead of speakers."
Professor Burke looked puzzled.
"Why is that?" he asked.
"Partly because the acoustics in my room aren't the most
suitable for musical appreciation, but also because I believe that using
headphones constitutes a superior way of listening to music."
The professor looked even more puzzled. "How did you reach that belief?" he
wanted to know.
"By bearing in mind the distinction between appearance and
essence," I straightaway replied.
"The object of evolutionary progress, so far as I'm concerned, is
to extend the sphere of essence at the expense of appearance, and this applies
as much to the evolution of music and its appreciation as to anything
else. By using headphones, music is
brought closer to one's head, one even gets the impression that it's actually
playing in one's head, which,
though a delusion, is nevertheless conducive to the progress of musical
appreciation, as essence would seem to have triumphed over appearance."
The professor's puzzlement appeared to have reached a veritable
climax by now. "How d'you distinguish between them?" he demanded.
"Well, essence pertains to the spirit and is therefore an
internal phenomenon, whereas appearance pertains to the senses and is
accordingly external," I replied.
"Music played through headphones approximates to essence by seeming
to be internalized, whereas music played, by contrast, through speakers comes
at one from outside the self and can therefore be equated with appearance. Now my contention is that it's better to
listen to music which seems to come from inside one's head than to music which
is distinct from one, and precisely because its evolution and appreciation
presuppose, in advancing, greater degrees of interiorization. The apparent stems from the
solar roots of the Universe, in complete contrast to that which aspires, as
essence, to the future consummation of evolving life. Thus as we approximate more and more to the
latter, it's logical that headphones should supersede speakers as the
appropriate means through which to cultivate ends, which is to say, listen to music."
Professor Burke appeared to have grasped the gist of my brief exposition
and now looked slightly less puzzled than before. I had almost convinced him, he admitted,
although he made it clear to me that his personal preference for speakers was
unlikely to be undermined in consequence!
He was far too set in his ways for that!
"And do you prefer orchestral music to Modern Jazz?" he asked,
having decided to continue the conversation along similar lines.
"Frankly, it depends on the type of orchestral music or
Modern Jazz in question, as well as on my mood, so I cannot claim to be
entirely consistent in my musical preferences," I confessed. "But I know that I have too much
culture, in a manner of speaking, to be greatly given to the prospect of only
listening to Modern Jazz. Even after
long confinement in the metropolis, which I know to be basically hostile to my
environmental needs, I haven't become completely proletarianized or, for that
matter, Afro-Americanized. Yet I
couldn't resign myself to orchestral music alone, for I'm essentially too
ambivalent, by nature and circumstances, to be capable of an exclusive
preference. A somewhat 'Steppenwolfian'
predicament, if you know anything about Harry Haller."
The professor smiled guardedly.
"Not very much," he confessed.
"Although I've read a little Hermann Hesse. What particularly intrigues me about what
you've just said is the implication that Modern Jazz is somehow proletarian,
whereas orchestral music, even when Soviet, is not. Can you justify that?"
"I think I can," was my fairly self-confident
response. "The chief distinction at
issue lies in whether the music is naturalistic, and therefore acoustic, or
artificial, and therefore electric.
Clearly, an orchestra should be described as naturalistic, whilst a
typical modern-jazz group, being electric, can only be comparatively
artificial. That, as I say, is the chief
distinction."
"But surely Shostakovich's symphonies are proletarian even
though acoustic?" Professor Burke objected.
I resolutely shook my head.
"Shostakovich's symphonies are no more proletarian than the
orchestral works of any other composer," I retorted. "And for the simple
reason that they're comparatively naturalistic, not artificial, and thereby
pertain to a bourgeois stage of evolution."
"The Soviets would surely have objected to that opinion," the
professor countered in no uncertain terms.
"Maybe," I conceded.
"But, there again, the leaders of Soviet Russia had little option
but to pass orchestral music off as proletarian, since they lived in what
purported to be a proletarian state. Yet
the fact nevertheless remains that serious music which is not electric but
acoustic is fundamentally naturalistic, and by implication bourgeois, whether
or not it's called proletarian."
"Even with an anti-formalist, and hence programmatic,
bias?" the professor queried, still evidently unconvinced.
"Even then," I assured him, "since the
anti-formalist line only resulted in the bitter pill of bourgeois music being
coated, as it were, in a thin layer of proletarian sugar, which usually took
the form of a programmatic musical commentary on some Soviet achievement and/or
a verbal dedication to it. Hence Shostakovich's October 1917
symphony, which you're now playing.
A quite remarkable work by any standards, but not a genuinely
proletarian one! For proletarian music,
properly so-considered, is distinguishable from bourgeois music by being
electric, as already remarked. I have yet, however, to mention two other important distinctions
which should be borne in mind when we endeavour to ascertain the class status
of any given type of music. The first is
that proletarian music reflects a materialistic contraction over bourgeois
music by utilizing a group or band of, usually, between three and six
musicians. Compared with the two hundred
or more players in a modern orchestra, this is a significant distinction which
represents a degree of evolutionary progress that should not be
underestimated! For the contraction of
the material side of the world, in whatever context, is the antithetical
corollary of the expansion of its spiritual side. In the case of the development from
orchestras to groups, we are witnessing a sort of convergence from the Many to
the One or, rather, the Few, with the numerous instruments and instrumental
combinations of the former being superseded by the comparatively few
instruments and instrumental combinations of the latter. However, while the material side contracts,
the spiritual side expands through utilization, by the jazz group, of
instruments which produce an artificial as opposed to a naturalistic sound, and
consequently result in a more transcendent music which aspires, in a manner of
speaking, towards the divine flowering of evolution, rather than stems from the
diabolic natural roots of life. The
spiritual also expands in a second way - namely, through the emphasis jazz
musicians generally place on essence rather than appearance in the retention,
through memory, of the music they're playing, instead of reliance on a printed
score. This is the other important
distinction between bourgeois and proletarian music. For the bourgeois musician, be he a member of
an orchestra or of a chamber ensemble, is dependent on music scores, which
means that he is partly tied to appearances.
The proletarian musician, by contrast, memorizes his music, and so
approximates it to essence, which reflects a superior development in the
gradual interiorization of music, as required by evolutionary progress. There is, however, an exception where
bourgeois musicians are concerned, and that is the concerto soloist, who
normally memorizes his part whether he be a pianist, a violinist, an organist,
a cellist, or whatever. Thus he is
distinguishable from the rest of the musicians with whom he is performing not
only by dint of his greater part, but also by dint of his commitment to essence
rather than to appearance. The fact that
he plays his concerto part on an acoustic instrument, on the other hand, keeps
him tied to the naturalistic, and hence to the realm of bourgeois music."
Professor Burke gave me the impression of being grudgingly
impressed by what I had just said, and ventured to inquire whether, in that
case, jazz musicians who played acoustic instruments were not fundamentally
bourgeois, too?
"In a sense, I suppose they generally are," I
replied, following a brief reflective pause, "because the use of, say, an
acoustic as opposed to an electric guitar would tie the musician in question to
the naturalistic in pretty much the same way that a concerto performer was tied
to it, and so preclude his producing a truly transcendent sound. In Modern Jazz, however, the emphasis is on
electric guitars, as on electric keyboards, so regular use of an acoustic
instrument tends to be the exception to the rule. Most jazz guitarists retain a distinct bias
for the electric, which is only to be expected, considering that Jazz is
essentially a proletarian music and therefore calls, appropriately, for
electric instruments. And it usually
transpires that the finest guitarists are the most consistently transcendental,
because exclusively, or almost exclusively, electric. Those who regress to acoustic instruments
simply produce an inferior sound - naturalistic as opposed to artificial."
The professor's face suddenly reflected a degree of acquired
enlightenment at this point, and he briefly shook his head, as if to say:
'Well, I never!' Then he asked: "So
what of those modern composers like Stockhausen, Boulez, Bedford, and Kagel,
who make use of electronic means in the production of their so-called
avant-garde music - are they proletarian, too?"
I could tell by his sceptical tone-of-voice that he rather
doubted it, but I was fairly convinced to the contrary and answered: "It
would depend on whether or not their music was exclusively electronic, since an
avant-garde musician who was exclusively dedicated to atonal electronics would,
in my view, amount to a proletarian composer.
Yet there doesn't seem to be all that many such musicians in action in
this rather transitional age. For even
Stockhausen, who until his recent demise was one of the world's most radical
composers, also uses traditional means, including orchestras and scores. Consequently most avant-garde composers tend
to be bourgeois/proletarian rather than genuinely proletarian in their musical
integrity. Some, like Stockhausen, will
be more artificial than naturalistic, because more electronic and atonal than
acoustic and tonal, whereas others, like Tippett, will be more naturalistic
than artificial, because more acoustic and tonal than electronic and atonal."
"To the best of my knowledge Michael Tippett's music isn't
electronic at all, Justin," the professor corrected.
"No, but then his orchestral music often has a degree of
atonality which places it in a kind of transitional, semi-essential context,
albeit one firmly rooted in the apparent.
His Concerto
for Orchestra is a case in point, being typically bourgeois/proletarian in
its mixed tonalities and atonalities.
But, fundamentally, Tippett is musically conservative and therefore he
doesn't depart from dualistic or bourgeois precedent to any radical extent,
scarcely at all in a majority of his works.
At best, he could hold his own with a number of moderate Continental
composers, like Honegger and Martinu, but he wouldn't wish to emulate composers
like Stockhausen or Kagel who, in any case, appertain to a more advanced
transitional, i.e. bourgeois/proletarian, civilization. Only, as a rule, from countries like Germany,
Italy, and the United States does one get the most radical musical experiments,
since they're in the front rank of contemporary civilization, having superseded
Britain and France on the dualistic level.
A majority of British composers are musically rather conservative,
producing, like Walton, neo-romantic or neo-classical or some other more traditional
type of bourgeois music. Of course, from
a conservative point-of-view their music is often excellent, as anyone who has
listened to Walton's or Berkeley's or Rubbra's more tuneful works will
doubtless agree. But if it is one thing
to bring a given tradition to a head, it's quite another to forge a completely
new orientation, and this, as a rule, the British are reluctant to do!"
"Not surprisingly, Justin," opined Professor Burke,
allowing himself the brief luxury of a passing smile, "since
British civilization is rather more static and reactionary, these days, than
dynamic and revolutionary."
I nodded affirmatively.
"Whereas the German and American civilizations are still capable of
some musical progress," was my due comment. "However, there are limits to the degree
of musical progress they can evolve, limits which in part stem from the
transitional nature of such civilizations and in part from the instrumental
resources, some of which are rather crude, to hand. I do not anticipate a consistently full-blown
transcendental approach to music before the official beginnings of
post-dualistic civilization become manifest in the world."
"And presumably such an approach to music would be both
electronic and atonal," the professor suggested.
"Indeed," I replied.
"With a corresponding materialistic reduction of instruments to a
bare minimum and total elimination of scores in the interests of greater
interiorization, as required by the preponderance of essence over appearance in
proletarian music - which will mostly be listened to through the medium of
headphones."
"And what of Modern Jazz - how will that develop?" an
ever-curious Professor Burke wanted to know.
"It will probably become increasingly atonal and
electronic, thus tending to become indistinguishable from the best proletarian
music or, rather, to evolve into the latter," I boldly speculated. "For Modern Jazz is fundamentally a
secular rather than a religious music, a kind of musical equivalent to
Socialist Realism or Modern Realism, whereas the best electronic music tends to
reflect a religious bias ... commensurate with its atonality, which places it
in a position equivalent to abstract or transcendental art, as developed, in
the past, by painters like Mondrian and Kandinsky, but, in the present, by
light or technological artists like Kepes and Peine. A paradox really, in that quite a lot of
Modern Jazz is concerned, at least intermittently, with transcendent values -
as mainly signified by meditation."
"Which, presumably, indicates that it's evolving towards
musical transcendentalism?" the professor solemnly conjectured.
"Yes, but from a tonal rather than an atonal base, and
thus in an apparent rather than an essential context," I contended. "After all, tonality in music is
equivalent to representation in painting or to narration in literature, and is
therefore aligned with the apparent, which is why, despite its transcendental
pretensions, I described Modern Jazz as Social Realist. The bulk of it is certainly tonal, and
consequently exists on a lower, i.e. popular, evolutionary level than the
atonal. Eventually Modern Jazz will
cease to exist, as people gravitate from the apparent to the essential in
accordance with the demands of evolutionary progress on the post-dualistic
level. Everything secular will be
transcended in the wholly religious music of the future, just as Socialist
Realism will be eclipsed by the relevant types of transcendental art, as
appropriate to a full-blown post-dualistic civilization. From being concrete, or partly concrete,
everything will become abstract, pursuing the path of maximum essence, even
though a wholly essential art is unobtainable through apparent means. Headphones may, for instance, give one the
impression that the music is taking place inside one's head, but such an
impression still falls short of reality, and must inevitably remain so. Only with the ensuing post-human millennium
will art become completely interiorized.
But by then - possibly some 2-3 centuries hence - all forms of musical
and pictorial creation will have been superseded by the synthetically-induced
artificial visionary experience of the Superman. In the meantime, however, we will require
music as before, since we'll still be men and thus dependent on the senses,
including the sense of hearing, for our aesthetic appreciation. However, once we completely transcend the
senses, as brains artificially supported and sustained, we'll also transcend
the fine arts. But throughout the
duration of the next and final human civilization, we can do no better than to
spiritualize them to a greater extent ... using apparent means."
The professor coughed slightly and admitted, with a brief shrug
of his shoulders, that I may well be right.