Lyrics & Knowledge Personal Pages Record Shop Auction Links Radio & Media Kids Membership Help
The Mudcat Cafesj

Post to this Thread - Sort Descending - Printer Friendly - Home


We Need Music to Survive

Amos 05 Jun 09 - 04:23 PM
Dorothy Parshall 05 Jun 09 - 04:39 PM
Amos 05 Jun 09 - 04:54 PM
Wesley S 05 Jun 09 - 05:02 PM
bankley 06 Jun 09 - 08:45 AM
Dorothy Parshall 06 Jun 09 - 11:44 AM
GUEST,Ed 06 Jun 09 - 12:12 PM
jeffp 06 Jun 09 - 12:18 PM
Dorothy Parshall 06 Jun 09 - 12:25 PM
GUEST 06 Jun 09 - 12:29 PM
jeffp 06 Jun 09 - 02:55 PM
Waddon Pete 06 Jun 09 - 04:39 PM
Dorothy Parshall 07 Jun 09 - 03:22 PM
Share Thread
more
Lyrics & Knowledge Search [Advanced]
DT  Forum Child
Sort (Forum) by:relevance date
DT Lyrics:





Subject: We Need Music to Survive
From: Amos
Date: 05 Jun 09 - 04:23 PM

A touching essay from the Christian Science Monitor, for those most likely to appreciate it:

"Boston - One of my parents' deepest fears, I suspect, is that society would not value me as a musician. I remember my mother's reaction when I announced my decision to study music instead of medicine: "You're wasting your SAT scores!" My parents love music, but at the time they were unclear about its value.

The confusion is understandable: We put music in the "arts and entertainment" section of the newspaper. But music often has little to do with entertainment. Quite the opposite.

The ancient Greeks had a fascinating way of articulating how music works. In their quadrivium – geometry, arithmetic, astronomy, and music – astronomy and music are two sides of the same coin. Astronomy describes relationships between observable, external, permanent objects.

Music illuminates relationships between invisible, internal, transient objects. I imagine us having internal planets, constellations of complicated thoughts and feelings. Music finds the invisible pieces inside our hearts and souls and helps describe the position of things inside us, like a telescope that looks in rather than out.

In June 1940, French composer Olivier Messiaen was captured by the Germans and sent to a prisoner-of-war camp. There, he finished a quartet for piano, cello, violin, and clarinet, and performed it, with three other imprisoned musicians, for the inmates and guards of that camp. The piece ("Quartet for the End of Time") is arguably one of the greatest successes in the history of music.

Given what we have since learned about life under Nazi occupation, why would anyone write music there? If you're just trying to stay alive, why bother with music? And yet – even from concentration camps themselves, we have surviving evidence of poetry, music, and visual art – many people made art. Why?

Art must be, somehow, essential for life. In fact, art is part of survival; art is part of the human spirit, an unquenchable expression of who we are; art is one of the ways in which we say, "I am alive, and my life has meaning."

On Sept. 11, 2001, I was a resident of Manhattan. Later that day I reached a new understanding of my art. Given the day's events, the idea of playing the piano seemed absurd, disrespectful, and pointless. Amid ambulances, firefighters, and fighter jets, I heard an inner voice ask: "Why am I here? What place has a musician in this moment?"

Then I saw how we survived. The first group activity in my neighborhood that night was singing. People sang. They sang around firehouses; they sang "We Shall Overcome," "America the Beautiful," "The Star-Spangled Banner"; they sang songs learned in elementary school, which some hadn't sung since then.

Within days, we gathered at Lincoln Center for the Brahms Requiem. Along with firefighters and fighter jets, artists were "first responders" in this disaster, too. The military secured our airspace, but musicians led the recovery. In measuring the revival of New York, the return of Broadway – another art form – was as significant a milestone as the reopening of the stock markets.

I now understand that music is not part of "arts and entertainment." It's not a luxury, something we fund from budget leftovers. Music is a basic need of human survival. Music is one of the ways we make sense of things, a way to express feelings when we have no words, a way to understand things with our hearts when we cannot grasp them with our minds. Music is the language we choose when we are speechless.

Imagine a graduation with absolutely no music – or a wedding, a presidential inauguration, or a service celebrating the life and death of a close friend – imagine these with no music whatsoever. What's missing – entertainment? Hardly.

What's missing is the capacity to meaningfully experience these events, as though eating great food without tasting it. Music functions as a container for experience – it augments capacity to grasp complex things. Without music, the events of our lives slip like water through cupped hands. Music increases our capacity to hold life experiences, to celebrate them, to survive them.

The performance I think of as my most important concert took place in a nursing home in a small Midwestern town. I was playing with a dear friend of mine, a violinist. We began with Aaron Copland's "Sonata," which was written during World War II and dedicated to a young pilot who was shot down during the war.

Midway through the piece, an elderly man seated in a wheelchair near the front of the concert hall began to weep. After we finished, we mentioned that the piece was dedicated to a downed pilot. The man became so disturbed he had to leave the auditorium, but showed up backstage afterward, tears and all, to explain himself.

He told us that during World War II, as a pilot, he was in an aerial combat situation where one of his team's planes was hit. He watched his friend bail out and his parachute open. But the Japanese planes returned and machine-gunned across the parachute chords, separating the parachute from the pilot. He then watched his friend drop away into the ocean, lost. He said he had not thought about that for years, but during that first piece of music we played, this memory returned to him so vividly that it was as though he was reliving it.

How did Copland manage to capture that picture of internal planets so clearly?

People walk into concert halls as they walk into emergency rooms, in need of healing. They may bring a broken body to a hospital, but they often bring with them to the concert a mind that is confused, a heart that is overwhelmed, a soul that is weary. Whether they go out whole again depends partly on how well musicians do their craft.

A musician is more of a paramedic than an entertainer. I'm not interested in entertaining you; I'm interested in keeping you alive. Fully alive. We're a lot like cardiac surgeons; we hold people's hearts in our hands every day. We just use different instruments.

What should we expect from young people who choose a future in music? Frankly, I expect them to save the planet.

If there is a future wave of wellness, of harmony, of peace, an end to war, mutual understanding, equality, fairness, I don't expect it to come from a government, a military force, or a corporation.

If there is a future of peace for humankind, if we are to have an understanding of how these invisible, internal things should fit together, I expect it will come from the artists, because that's what we do.

As we did in the Nazi camps and on the evening of 9/11, the artists are the ones who might be able to help us with our internal, invisible lives."

Karl Paulnack is a pianist and director of the music division at the Boston Conservatory. This essay is adapted from a welcome speech he gave to incoming freshman.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: Dorothy Parshall
Date: 05 Jun 09 - 04:39 PM

Amos:
You must have missed that on the other thread; no, I don't remember. But I already sent it to a musician friend. on 2 June.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: Amos
Date: 05 Jun 09 - 04:54 PM

Oh! Sorry. I just caught it and thought it new.


A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: Wesley S
Date: 05 Jun 09 - 05:02 PM

It bears repeating. Thanks Amos.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: bankley
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 08:45 AM

'Music is the bridge between worlds'   Edgar Cayce, Hopkinsville, KY.

a good friend of mine invented his own way of reading and writing music with colours and geometric shapes... simple and engaging, maybe one day he'll publish it... and he is a great sight reader of the trad. linear, little black 'golf clubs', but felt it was time for a better way...


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: Dorothy Parshall
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 11:44 AM

The piece with which Amos started was on the Music Heals thread, 2 June. The importance of music is further discussed there. I found that thread interesting but it seemed to peter out.

I just started reading Oliver Sacks' Musicophilia. Highly recommend this to anyone interested in music and/or the workings of the brain. Sacks is an amazing human being, a neurologist who sees .....


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: GUEST,Ed
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 12:12 PM

Sacks is an amazing human being, a neurologist who sees

Are most neurologists blind? That's a bit of a worry.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: jeffp
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 12:18 PM

Most people are blind....


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: Dorothy Parshall
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 12:25 PM

Sorry. I am so amazed at how incredibly insightful this man that I could not even think of the words to describe it. He is so dedicated to understanding, esp understanding people with brain differences - most of us? Even Oaxaca Jounal, almost a travelogue, contained meat about important aspects of the human condition. IMO!

It is still early in the Pacific NW. Perhaps waking up with mudcat is not my best move but it does help me to wake up! OK so it is 9:25 here but it was a short night.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: GUEST
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 12:29 PM

Most people are blind....
The WHO differ:

Visual impairment and blindness


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: jeffp
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 02:55 PM

There are more who are blind than those who cannot see.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: Waddon Pete
Date: 06 Jun 09 - 04:39 PM

Amos,

Thanks for posting that!

Best wishes,

Peter


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: We Need Music to Survive
From: Dorothy Parshall
Date: 07 Jun 09 - 03:22 PM

Amos: I feel as though I rained on your parade. I was merely imparting info. I love this article and just thought of another musician friend who would like it. There is no doubt that music is essential to the human condition. This article does say it very well indeed. I have copied it to file so I have it the next time I think of someone who might appreciate, or need, it.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate
  Share Thread:
More...

Reply to Thread
Subject:  Help
From:
Preview   Automatic Linebreaks   Make a link ("blue clicky")


Mudcat time: 28 April 5:21 AM EDT

[ Home ]

All original material is copyright © 2022 by the Mudcat Café Music Foundation. All photos, music, images, etc. are copyright © by their rightful owners. Every effort is taken to attribute appropriate copyright to images, content, music, etc. We are not a copyright resource.