Archive for Music Composition

Completed Questions: Experimental Group Voice class

Experimental Group Voice, Keith Rowley

  1. 1.How will this activity attract University of Washington students? This activity will attract UW students by being experientially effective. That is, participants will not only know they have been through an exciting event, they will feel it. This course will expand their range of expression, emotion, feeling, and interrelationships, and in so doing, students will be so excited at their growth they will feel compelled to tell others about it.
  2. Why do you want to teach this class? Because I am excited by the expressive and connecting potential of the human voice. And I want to empower people to explore their humanity, their compassion, and their ability to connect the deepest parts of themselves with the deepest parts of others.
  3. What skills and/or knowledge do you hope the students will gain from the activity? Primarily, I hope students will gain trust in themselves and their classmates. I hope they will learn to trust their own ability to express themselves more fully, trust in their power to overcome any fear of expressing themselves, trust in their ability to share themselves fully with others, and trust in the effectiveness of both opening themselves to others, and being open with others. I hope they learn that by being open to others, by listening to others, and by being committed to the process, they will create something larger than they can alone.
  4. What exercizes will the students participate in? Exercises will include visualization (controlling their emotions), meditation (getting in touch with their emotions), breathing (controlling their voices), calisthenics (enabling a wider range of expression), communication and listening (opening themselves to others), and vocalizing, employing various musical elements such as rhythm, melody, harmony, dissonance, tone/timbre, volume/amplitude, texture (monophonic, polyphonic), etc.
  5. What supplies and/or equipment will the student need to provide? Just their self, their voice, and an open mind, heart, and ears.
  6. What supplies will the student receive? Perhaps some printed inspirational resources, and/or audio CDs.
  7. Please describe your background in this area and your teaching/training background. I have been singing since before I can remember. My family of seven sang rounds together in the car all the time. I have sung in choirs starting in seventh grade, and made the Texas All-State Choir in 1981. I have 20 years experience singing semi-professionally. I have also been teaching at the college level since 2000, and am currently teaching at Bellevue Community College.

Transcription of the first line of “The Story,” by Brandi Carlisle, for Erin’s birthday tatoo

Erin wants me to transcribe “all of these lines across my face”– the first line from Brandi Carlisle’s “The Story.” Here’s the video.
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Course Outline for Experimental College Voice Class

  1. General course description
    1. Subject matter covered in this course
    2. This class will cover various experiential approaches to vocalization, including texture and harmony, as a group. We will concentrate on eliciting a variety of emotions, as a group, using only our voices and bodies.
    3. My approach to teaching this content will be both very experiential and experimental. I will use various means to engage and prepare students for our attempts to work together to elicit specific emotions.
    4. The only prerequisites for this course are the willingness to vocalize with other people, and a willingness to be open to all sorts of possible experiences.
    5. This class will draw on various elements of choral composition, such as rhythm, melody, harmony, dissonance, tone/timbre, volume/amplitude, texture, etc. It will also draw upon visualization, meditation, calisthenics, and breathing techniques.
    6. Students might find it helpful to draw upon their experiences working in groups (not necessarily singing in groups!), and in meditative environments.
  1. Method of course delivery
    • The course will mainly entail learning together, as a group.
    • In fact, the main point of this class is to create what we cannot create alone.
    • Students will be sticking to the pace of the group’s growth. I will encourage students to engage in active listening throughout their lives, by listening to various artists, as well as the world around them, in an effort to broaden their “palette” of sounds with which to elicit emotion. But the point of the class is, again, to create together what we cannot create alone.
    • Inspirational resources may be provided via audio CDs and/or printed material.
  1. General course goals/objectives
    • Students will directly experience working in a group.
    • Students will directly experience creating something as a group that they cannot create on their own.
    • Students will broaden:
      • 1) their relationships with others
      • 2) their ideas of what music is
      • 3) the limitations of their feelings
      • 4) the limitations of their expression
  1. Outline of overall course structure (i.e., lessons/topics)
    • The course is broken down into combinations of “preparation-to-create” and “approach-to-creation.”
      • “Preparation-to-create” is: calisthenics, meditation, breathing, and visualization.
      • “Approach-to-creation” is: visualization, and the various choral-composition techniques, such as texture, harmony, melody, unity, dissonance, rhythm, amplitude/volume, and tone/timbre.
    • The course will last an hour and a half, once a week, for six weeks.
    • Each week I will present a new combination of “preparation” and “approach.”

Experimental Voice Class: Summary/Description

In this class, people will use their voices to elicit emotion. The class is inherently experiential and experimental, with the participants exploring their voices, their emotions, and their interrelationships, all within a safe, fun, and enticing environment. Exercises will include visualization, meditation, breathing, calisthenics, rhythm, melody, harmony, dissonance, tone/timbre, volume/amplitude, texture (monophonic, polyphonic), etc. In such an experimental and interactive creative environment, we will foster community via people sharing in the creation and experience of a wide array of emotions, including love, sadness, joy, power, anger, grooviness, happiness, play, confusion, and peace.

Earth My Body

My old friend Dell is helping me with “Earth My Body,” which is a song taught to me by this great guy Kaj (pron: “kai”) at the Kerrville Folk Festival back in, say, 1991. Simple words:

Earth my body,

water my blood,

wind my breath,

and fire my spirit.

For my first two years at Kerrville, drum circles were just kick-ass: very often, very nice, very humbling, spiritual, powerful, communal. Exactly what my soul desired at the time (and has been craving ever since). (Since the KFF is a "songwriter’s" festival, KFF, Inc. officially banned drums after my second year– quite probably as a direct result of our drumming– which was, to me, at least, and i know to most anyone who was present at this particular circle– among the most divine experiences in my life.)

One evening, on the back of Chapel Hill, the darkest, quietest, most sacred spot on the ranch…

…nice fire,

a dozen or more beautiful hippies,

clear sky, no moon.

lots of stars.

smallish fire.

 

Kaj starts this beat.

He’d taught me this song earlier,

so i knew it. Dropped right in with my talking drum,

got it going.

Organically, grows.

People join in as their spirit gets it–

“gets” it.

Groks it.

All of it going on: super-natural.

Kaj starts singing.

I join.

We sing in unison for quite some time,

and one by one,

people start joining in,

start singing in this unison, this one song…

Once this feeling, this communal bond, is established,

i add a harmony,

the 5th,

very quietly at first,

blending it in as just an overtone.

And it grows.

Soon others join in the harmony as well.

i add the 3rd,

quietly at first,

and soon all three parts are going,

and everyone is feeling it,

knowing,

that–

this is something special!

Everybody knows it, is singing,

playing, harmonizing,

the spirit of the song so growing organically,

moving us all

from the inside

to play as IT

–the SONG–

wants to be played, to be manifested in this plane of reality…

for she is the message,

and we, the messengers…

And i’m on fucking autopilot–

dun-dun talking away–

talking with–

–holding conversations with–

every individual musician/instrument-combination in the circle–

taking turns, listening, responding–

listen/reply–

hear/say–

joke/laugh–

cry/weep–

bless/thanks–

spit/spat–

The spirit rises–

we are all orbiting Pluto–

the stars spinning round our heads–

the gods whirling ‘twixt our souls–

hearts beat in time–

the earth throbs with us–

fire-sparks join our spirits rising–

the wind sings harmonies in the trees octaves higher–

energies race to the farthest oceans of space–

brightening the darkness

all around us,

within us

eventually we drop;

we feel the spirit quiet.

As one, we fade,

leaving only the crackling of the fire,

the chirping of the crickets,

the wind, still calling our universal names…

In silence, we all exhale,

for the first time in 20 minutes

(though it seems lifetimes).

i look up at the stars and think,

“wow! look at the stars!”

i hear a voice across the circle whisper:

“wow! look at the stars!”

i think to myself, “this must be God,”

another voice across the way:

“this must be God.”

i think to myself: “I am THIRSTY!!!”

someone hands me a bottle of water.

Like that.

Anyway, it’s such a wonderful, meditative chant on our inner connection with our world. It’s always stayed with me, and I always wanted to lay down some kind of version of it. So, finally, in the summer of ‘05, i did. But I’m not perfectly happy with it, so just a few nights ago, I was iChatting with Dell, and he brought up again how he’d like to do some collaboration over the internet, like I’m doing with Jon. So, right there I tell him about “Earth My Body,” and he says, “send send.”

So, I’m excited about music again. Lots of it going on in my life right now… just need some money to be able to keep it coming. Oh, Brotherhood of God, help me open the God-Mind connection, to manifest greatness and goodness, joy and health, for the greater good of the Universe and Everyone Concerned…

Working with Jon Anderson

OK, I have to admit that, while I’m loving living in Seattle, it has not been as financially abundant as I could wish. However, I am working with Jon Anderson now! Yes, that Jon Anderson, the singer for Yes! Check out his Myspace page, listen to the track “Horizon” (which is the 6th and final track from his and Vangelis’ 1980 album Private Collection. I am also working with Jon on a large-scale choral piece… but it’s a bit early to get into more details. Stay tuned.  

Some Thoughts on Music Production/Composition/Software

Been working on an “Electronica” piece in GarageBand… my first real foray into dance music. I mean, it’s rather upbeat, although in D minor, so not too “happy” sounding. Started from a really cool patch in Korg Legacy– um “Cell”, which is a real cool area where you combine like three different patches from the MS-20, Polysix and (maybe) Wavestation into really phat Combis. Anyway this one patch had a really kickin’ beat and percolating synth washes that immediately caught my ear. Real easy to play, too.

Anyway, it’s got the standard “four on the floor” quarter note kick drum keeping the pulse, and them i’ve just had alot of fun jamming with the built-in Garage Band synth sounds, plus some Polysix sounds and several percussion tracks, both built-in GB sounds (which, i must say, remind me of the rather weak SY-85 percussion sounds). Luckily i got my NI-Battery plugin going yesterday morning with a BUTTload of cool “techno” hits. Yes. Very nice.

Have tried several times to get JDs Guru drum thing going, but w/o avail. But i did get iDrum going, too, so i’ve got two nice drum plugs going.

So i’m having fun with music again. Always makes my life better. Came up with some weird German-sounding name for it like “Phini Vesta” or somesuch (no, that’s not it, thank god).

Before it’s ready to go, though, will need to do some mixing and some playing with the arrangement. Get some breaks going, a better intro, some trippy effects to mash things together, playing with emphasizing certain parts over others. Just generally making the mish-mash of all those sounds some variation. Right now it’s just 3 1/2 minutes of jamming on all the tracks. Many of them loops, which always gets boring after a minute or two.

Which brings me to a little complaint, which i’ll start off supporting: Loops. Now, i love loops. They are instant grooves, instant moods, instant textures. And i love creating them. I love the process of creating them: that building, that unfolding of complex richness, of interweaving lines, of inter-related strings. (see Digital Performer’s POLAR for a pretty good live-looping environment. Also, of course, Ableton’s Live.)

It’s just a problem when in GarageBand i’ve created a really nice loop-based comp– with the built-in loops– which after a few repeats begs to change up a little. Now, it’s important to emphasize that this is a problem with the built-in loops. Because you CAN’T change them. At least not the notes they’re playing. You can add a different effect to it, or reverse it, or crop/truncate it. But if you just want to change the order of the notes, you can’t. Not without some serious patience and work.
OK then, maybe that’s the real problem: my laziness.

Maybe. But when i’m wanting to just create, having to break out of right-brain creativity to have to left-brain engineer really disrupts the inspiration for me. Yeah, for me. Not for everybody, for sure. I think of Craig McGonagill in particular. Very strong engineering skills that flow easily back and forth from and to his creative side.

I’ve always both admired and been jealous of Craig for that. I think he’d really dig the laptop competition they have up here in Dallas.

So i complain about the state of loop-based composition.

But it’s another thing when i’m able to loop the midi-fied tracks. “Freeze” them in Logic. That’s really cool because you can always go back in and edit the notes, the performance, the MIDI notes. Expand, expound, variate, elucidate. But in Logic, it’s very difficult to get to the plugin synths. You’ve freekin’ gotta create a freekin’ Environment-thingy. Geez, what a pain that is. I haven’t even figured it out, truthbetold! That is by far my least favorite thing about Logic. That stoopid “Environment.”

The process of enabling plugin synths in Digital Performer is at least “doable…” That is, i have done it. In the mixer window, you just pick the plugin synth on a given track. I think it’s just a MIDI track (as opposed to an audio track). Much like the way to do it in GB, actually. Makes me wonder (yet again!) why Apple bought eMagic+Logic rather than MOTU+Digital Performer… DAMN!

That seemed like SUCH a better fit! I mean, DP was already (and always has been) Mac-only, while eMagic had to completely trash their Windows half once Apple took over. DP has always been more user friendly than Logic (for example in how to pull up softsynths, as above). Now, granted, DP’s user interface has always been highly un-Mac-standard, and would have needed a rather brisk overhaul by Apple. But so did Logic! And i think Apple could have done a BETTER job making over DP than they have with Logic!

… oh well. Pisser. Steve obviously skipped over my opinion on that one…

But in the end, by which i mean this present moment in which i am writing, the state of music composition technology is extremely, um, BADASS!!! I mean, looking at what i have: a $600 Mac Mini, an old Apple G4 CRT monitor running at 1600×1200, a $425 Novation X-Station controller/synth, and a pair of $115 M-Audio BX-4 studio reference monitors; that’s $1,140 for a multi-track recorder/editor + a bunch of synthesizers, a bunch of drum machines, a bunch of effects processors…
Wow. Nice little setup.

Not to mention all the other stuff i can do with the Mac Mini, like Photoshop, video editing/production, web production, email+communication, etc, etc.

And it’s only gonna get better. See my stuff on “technoliberation” and “transhumanism.” Peace+love.

yugen statement for Experimental Music Night

i have always been entranced by music. My family always sang together when i was growing up, and a lilting melody heard in any realm of my life would instantly have me singing and dancing.

i have since spent much of my quality time submerged in various nether-regions of music: recording my own tape- and computer-based compositions; studying trance-musics of mystical world cultures; experimenting with synthesizers; recording environments out in the real world, then bringing them home and filtering, shaping, and re-shaping them.

The word “yugen“ names a category of Zen art in which the subject is portrayed mysteriously, vaguely hinted at with just a few simple lines that suggest a fuller existence beyond. i have chosen to name my music thusly because music has always held this mysterious power over me, tantalizing me with aromatic whisps of rich texture, pregnant silences, intrigueing sequences of sound. yugen music, for me, at least, embodies the magic from which we were born, from which we experience every moment of our lives, and to which we return at death.

The Ear as the First Musical Instrument

Music has consistently been at the center of my life. I didn’t become consciously aware of this fact until my mid-teens, and throughout my life I have gradually come to realize that music is, in Joseph Campbell’s words, “my bliss.” This detailed, in-depth, independent study of musical aesthetics has allowed me to take great steps toward making the interdisciplinary connections I’ve sought since deciding to do an MAIS project, but had not been able to make due to lack of aesthetic terminology and familiarity with various aesthetic philosophies.

It really surprised me, for some reason that is now difficult to understand, to scan the literature of the field and discover that there were so many others for whom music and the other arts were so important as to devote entire books, culminating lifetimes of study and musical experience. Perhaps I was most surprised in realizing that I know so little about what I considered to be my area of expertise. Music has always been my guiding line, but I’ve also prided myself on a fairly self-consistent world-view, which I have developed through years of soul-searching and research. So when I read Bennett Reimer’s very soundly-argued philosophical argument for a (mostly) sound theory of musical education, I found myself intrigued by the attention to detail and the depth of musical experience that was obviously behind the text.

The Reimer book was, I think, an excellent introduction to my readings in musical aesthetics. It laid out the polar extremes of (a dimension of) aesthetic theory (Referentialism and Absolute Formalism) as well as a middle-ground theory (Absolute Expressionism). So, at the time, I took from this book, if nothing else, a standard by which to orient succeeding aesthetic theories. And this system worked fine for me until I encountered the ideas of Thomas Clifton and Brian Eno. Both Clifton and Eno emphasize the centrality of the listener. See, at the beginning of this Independent Study, I had a solid feeling of music’s fundamental role in the universe. I had already made interdisciplinary connections through the notions of music-as-vibration and of harmony as relationships between vibrations. All experience occurs through relationships, the main relationship being between subject and object, the self and the world, the knower and the known. But, while these relationships are usually considered as opposites, they are by no means mutually exclusive. As relationships, by definition, they imply and give meaning to each other. Music, therefore, has always validated my existence by confirming my creative relationship with the world.

So my problems started when I tried to incorporate the theories of Clifton and Eno into the framework of Reimer. Reimer, you see, doesn’t address improvisation, nor how the listener’s intention plays such an important role in musical experience. But for me and Clifton and Eno, music exists only while someone is hearing it.

I finally found reconciliation in the notion that the ear is the first musical instrument. If we take this statement to be true, then all sorts of implications arise. One is that music occurs in the listening. Yes, there is undoubtedly a certain logical and mathematical beauty in seeing music as formal structure, and it is probably even true, as Diana Raffman argues in her phenomenal book Language, Music and Mind, that our perception process is schema-driven. That is, in perceiving music, we unconsciously abstract it in order to commit it to conscious awareness and memory. But, to quote Raffman, “[a] person deaf from birth cannot know a piece of music.” (40) This is because they have never heard anything; they have never been sensitive to sound.

A second implication of the statement “the ear is the first musical instrument” is that it doesn’t matter who is producing the music– all that matters is that it is being heard. I prefer not to see this as a de-emphasis of the roles of performer and composer that crumbles the traditional musical hierarchy as much as it raises the role of listening itself to an art.

Which leads to a third implication, that listening is itself a creative act. We should not forget that what is noise to one listener may be music to another (and vice versa). I feel that music is brought into existence by the listener’s recognition of sound as music rather than by the composer’s (or performer’s) intention for sound to be music. Remember, the music’s producer doesn’t even enter into the equation. Here is where the listener’s socio-cultural context is taken into account. As Brian Eno says, “Things become artworks not because they contain value, but because we’re prepared to see them as artworks, to allow ourselves to have art experiences from them, before them, to frame them in contexts that confer value on them.” (Kelley, 207) And much of how we experience our world comes from the culture we live in. Thus it is that serious Western music critics generally don’t consider any music other than Western Classical music as art.

A fourth implication is that the listener-as-subject and the music-as-object cannot be separated from one another. It makes no sense at all to hold one as more important than the other or to consider one without the other. What is music, after all? For that matter, what is sound? Alan Watts stated the question as, “how would vibrations in the air be noisy if you didn’t have ears?” This is for me the strongest link to the world, in that “myself,” “music,” and “the world” all become enmeshed in a feedback continuum– that is, what happens in each affects the others. In composing, performing, or listening, as Thomas Clifton says, “music is what I am when I experience it.” (Rao, 297) When this feeling of unity with the world is strongest is in spontaneous “jams” with my band Makak and with various other people. As long as everyone is “on the same wavelength,” and everyone is listening more than playing, it is very easy to fall into this “zone” in which the music plays the musicians.

In conclusion, this independent study has helped me grow by simply exposing me to a wide array of perspectives on music. This growth has strengthened my commitment to continue experimenting with the creative possibilities of music by further deepening both its intellectual and emotional attraction to me. This study has most importantly confirmed that, in pursuing music as a lifestyle, I am on the right path.


Works Cited:

Kelley, Kevin, “Brian Eno: Gossip is Philosophy,” Wired, May 1995, pp. 146-51, 204-9.

Raffman, Diana, Language, Music and Mind, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 1993, 169 pp.

Rao, Doreen B., “Thomas Clifton”, On the Nature of Musical Experience, Bennett Reimer & Jeffrey Wright, eds., University Press of Colorado, Niwot, Colorado, 1992.

Reimer, Bennett, A Philosophy of Music Education, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1970, 173 pp.

“Singing the World:” Bridging Disparities via the Phenomenon of Music

I am fascinated with music. It intrigues me intellectually and engages me physically. It resonates across many different areas of my life, and I am extremely interested in experiencing life to the fullest, which is why I also chose to go into a graduate-level Interdisciplinary Arts program rather than concentrating on a single discipline such as music. The interdisciplinary approach parallels the intersensuality of music in that it keeps the channels of communication open between disparate phenomena, media, sensoria, and disciplines. Therefore, I feel that an exploration of my various thoughts regarding music should help illuminate the significance of my academic studies. This paper, then, will expound my philosophy of music by answering the following three questions:

• What is music?
• Why am I a musician?
• What should be known about my music?

My definition of music is relatively simple: music is structured, meaningful sound. It must be readily apparent that music is sound, but, as Diana Raffman says, we experience music as structure, and the structures makes us expect [more] meaning. (49) In order for sound to become music, a listener must establish a personal relationship with it. There must be something of the listener in it, something that permeates several layers of being. Music must be experienced synaesthetically, and must be understood, according to Thomas Clifton, as “a bodily engagement with sound.” (Rao, 55) Clifton credits Maurice Merleau-Ponty with saying that the body is “a general instrument of comprehension,” the setting for the phenomenal world of a person’s experience: a constant flux of images, sounds, environmental conditions, body gestures, aromas, ideas, and flashbacks. (65) Feelings come and go. Sounds come and go. Music comes and goes. And we, chameleon-like, change identity with each passing moment. As Clifton says, “music is what I am when I am experiencing it.” (297) This is a very compelling statement, because it links the existence of music with the existence of the listener. Thus, there is no difference between music and musical experience for Merleau-Ponty, Clifton and me, because there is no such thing as music outside of one’s experience of it.

Now, to answer the second question, I am a musician because of both music’s sensuality and its expressive potential, which more-or-less correspond to the roles of listener and producer. I use the word producer here instead of musician because, according to the definition of music above, my definition of a musician would read: a musician is one who makes structured, meaningful sound. And since the existence of music depends on someone hearing it, the listener must be considered also to create music, in the very act of listening. Thus, the distinction between listener and producer is that the producer generates structures of ordered atmospheric vibrations, which are then translated and re-created in the phenomenal experience of the listener. The producer must obviously also be a listener, but the producer feels the need to communicate, whereas the listener is content with listening.

What motivates this distinction between producer and listener is intent, and can be determined by answering the question, “what needs to be done?” What needs to be done by the listener is to personally, bodily engage in the music. As a listener, I am attracted by music’s sensuality, and I need to be physically, intellectually, and/or emotionally moved. I revel in the sensuality of music; how music sounds is its very power, its very identity. On the other hand, as a producer, again, I feel the need to elaborate my inherently communicative body gestures by using sounds. This need to “sing the world,” as Merleau-Ponty so poetically puts it, is the same urge to order, to express, to create, that motivates language and the other arts.

Which brings us to the third question, what should be known about my music? I must say here that my music, like all music, must be experienced firsthand in order for it to be known at all. With this condition stated, I have loosely designated three areas of my music for exploration: my creative process, physicality, and intellectuality.

I relate my music-making process to what Wallace Stevens said of modern poetry: that it is “the act of finding what will suffice.” (298) I have found that my musical creative process is marked greatly by trial and error in that I am always attempting to express myself musically, with success to varying degrees. These attempts fall into two categories: improvisation and recordings, which are themselves distinguished by intended audience.

At a live improvisation, literally anything can happen, as the musicians are “making it up as they go along,” acting and reacting with each other and the pervasive feelings of the moment. This organic “aliveness” is what attracts audiences to such performances, and is improvisation’s primary attraction for me as well. In contrast, listeners of recorded music get to experience music that is impossible for them to hear performed live. For instance, I rarely perform my solo music (yugen) for live audience, and when I do, it’s usually with prerecorded accompaniment. I have been recording my own music since 1983 (whereas my first regularly performing ensemble, Makak, has only been together since 1994), so I am used to being able to edit my music to near perfection in post-production. I enjoy having the control over every aspect of the music, and I work hard at giving my recorded pieces vitality and a unique identity.

Obviously, then, my recorded music could thus be considered as intellectual, since it is the product of countless hours of manipulation. But before we delve too far into the intellectuality of my music, it may prove helpful to look at both the intellectual and physical aspects of my music concurrently, in order to highlight their contrasting qualities. It may also help to relate them to Bennett Reimer’s dual aspects of musical experience, musical perception and musical reaction. According to Reimer, any musical experience must consist of the “perception, to some degree, of the constituent elements of music– melody, harmony, rhythm, etc…, and their interrelations, and their use in the context of a particular style” (which corresponds to physicality), and a “feelingful… reaction to the expressiveness of the perceived musical… material” (which corresponds to intellectuality). (98, 114)

My music can be considered physical in that its specific feelings instantiate intellectual generalizations; likewise, it can be considered intellectual in that it is possible to abstract from specific sensual/physical experiences broader generalizations and principles that may apply to other fields of experience. Reimer is quick to point out, however, that musical perception and reaction arise mutually: “the perception and reaction are simultaneous and interdependent. The perception is not a separate process which later produces a reaction, but is inherently ‘reactive’ in nature.” (79)
I shall point out a couple examples of physicality in my music: playing drums and singing. Playing drums is physical in that it engages my body with the immediacy of touch. Hand drumming consists of touching a stretched membrane in such a way that the membrane will vibrate, thus causing sound. This connection of skin-to-skin establishes a social relationship (in the manner of Martin Buber’s “I-thou” relationship) which, along with the hypnotizing power of the drum’s fixed timbre– a drone– and the repetitive motion of playing a rhythm, joins the drummer-as-subject and the drum-and-its-sound-as-object.

Likewise, singing consists in objectifying, in manifesting in sound, the singer’s subjective, phenomenal world. This is, again, Merleau-Ponty’s “singing the world:” it bridges the gap between intellect and physicality, between mind and body. Singing is intellectual in that it gives voice to the intellect, and it is sensual in that it is powered by the physical apparatus of the diaphragm, lungs, vocal chords, and mouth.

Thus, music transcends the dualities of subject and object, of musician and music. This bridging of the various disparate elements of my phenomenal world is precisely where lies the inherent value in music. In its expression, I know not “from whence it cometh,” and in its evocative prowess, I know not how it moves me so. As such, I have no alternative but to acknowledge its significance.


Works Cited:

Clifton, Thomas, Music as Heard: A Study in Applied Phenomenology, New Haven, Connecticut, Yale University Press, 1983.

Merleau-Ponty, Maurice, Consciousness and the Acquisition of Language, (further citation upon request).

Raffman, Diana, Language, Music and Mind, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 1993.

Rao, Doreen B., “Thomas Clifton”, On the Nature of Musical Experience, Bennett Reimer & Jeffrey Wright, eds., University Press of Colorado, Niwot, Colorado, 1992.

Reimer, Bennett, A Philosophy of Music Education, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1970.

Stevens, Wallace, “On Modern Poetry,” The Norton Anthology of Modern Poetry, 2nd ed., Richard Ellman and Robert O’Clair, eds., W. W. Norton & Company, New York, 1988.