Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Taking Up Arms With the Warrior Bard

Before reading this, read this.

This is such dogmatically dangerous ground on which to be treading and yet, as a willing heretical participant, there’s so much to say. Where does one begin?

First let us be fair to Milton Babbitt. He didn’t title his article “Who cares if you listen?” That was the editor of the magazine that did that. Okay, that’s it.

I still don’t put much stock in the subject matter of the article. Is composition a highly specific field? Yes. Does that mean it shouldn’t be accessible? No. Even Schoenberg knew that if he was going to write his music using the system he devised that he still had to place an emphasis on clarity. No matter how abstract, his music should be comprehensible to more than just the most highly trained of all composers (about 6 people). One would also be remiss not to mention the incorporation of the human element into Schoenberg’s music. And Webern shouldn’t be blamed, either. His music is incredibly inspired and well crafted. It was the post-WWII serialists who took Webern’s work and codified it to its utmost extremes.

“The sad thing is, this school of thought has become dogmatic for any scholarly composer. If you disagree, you're narrow-minded…what's the point of discussing, if we're not going to really discuss anything? They don't want discussion; they want conformity.” - Tim

"Any attempt to codify musical reality into a kind of imitation grammar (I refer mainly to the efforts associated with the Twelve-Tone System) is a brand of fetishism which shares with Fascism and racism the tendency to reduce live processes to immobile, labeled objects, the tendency to deal with formalities rather than substance. Claude Levi-Strauss describes (though to illustrate a different point) a captain at sea, his ship reduced to a frail raft without sails, who, by enforcing a meticulous protocol on his crew, is able to distract them from nostalgia for a safe harbor and from the desire for a destination.”
-Luciano Berio, Meditation on a Twelve-Tone Horse

I understand that the older generation grew up with this method. We get it. There was no other way. Beyond all this, though, is something that is much more subversive and sinister. Whilst the strictures of academia have loosened in recent years there is still this frighteningly dogmatic adherence to the music/teachings of Babbitt, Cage, Stockhausen and Boulez, even if only in theoretical form, in the upper echelons of academia. I’ve been thinking about this for years. Literally. I have thought for a long time now that the kind of conformity that came to be expected of composers after World War II is dangerous and fascist. You will do it this way! Isn’t this the kind of thinking that started that war in the first place? You will not question. You will acquiesce. The perfect society is a conformist society.

What’s worse is that this attitude developed (and, to a point, persists today) in a time where a lot of interesting things were happening musically outside of Darmstadt. That school basically turned a blind eye to all of it. There is no dialogue between proponents of total serialism and other musics. None. What does exist is merely a monologue which places no value on the influence of popular forms. Are you going to tell me that the likes of Miles Davis, George Gershwin, John Coltrane and Thelonius Monk don’t deserve to be placed with the most brilliant of their academic counterparts? If that’s the case I beg to differ. Furthermore I’m not sure if I would want to be associated with those that might actually think this.

I respect serialism, just as any thoroughly trained composer who learned how to utilize it should. I even enjoy incorporating serial elements into my own compositions from time to time. But I can’t bring myself to surrender all creative control (not to mention my humanity) to a formula that merely expresses one’s intellect and totally discounts one’s personal experiences. Don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that Babbitt’s music has no value. Like all previous music, it has historical and theoretical value when taken into the whole of musical history. To me total serialism is largely empty and devoid of meaning.

The faculty nearly bit the heads off of anyone who remotely insinuated anything anti-Babbitt. So... what's the point of discussing, if we're not going to really discuss anything? They don't want discussion; they want conformity.

When the subject of Babbitt and his teachings comes up there is no discussion. You accept everything or you are a heretic. When our teachers talk about him all of a sudden there is this reverential tone and he is spoken of as if he were some kind of Promethean figure bringing fire and knowledge to we mere mortals.

Now here's my two cents:

The conformity demanded by the proponents of total serialism amounts to little more than the dogmatic practices of musical terrorists who would rather blow up the entire world for the sake of their empty god than admit that there might be other paths to musical expression that are capable of coexisting. - Brad Fowler

“Alas, this industrialized twelve-tone horse, dull on the outside and empty inside, constantly being perfected and dragged to a new Troy in shadow of an ideological war long since fought and won by responsible minds like Schoenberg, with neither systems nor scholarship for armor!"
-Berio, “Meditations…”

10 comments:

the warrior bard said...

...will you marry me?

Herr Vogler said...

Uuuuuuh...I'm awesome!!!

Mikey the Pikey said...

Ok, fine, I'll marry you Tim, but I'm only doing it for the insurance, k!

Herr Vogler said...

Wow. I was hoping to get actual feedback on this one.

Reed said...

no feedback for you!

Herr Vogler said...

"Come back one year!!!"

Mikey the Pikey said...

Well, geez my man, what do you want? ("Ooh, ouch, you're a lil bit irritable Kyle! What's the matter, got some sand in your vagina?!")

Let's face it, between Tim and yourself, you've more or less covered your entire side of the argument. And in our little group here I don't think your going to find a differing opinion on the subject (I know I'm in total agreement). What's left for us really except to nod our heads politely and say, "Yes, thank you!"?

But, for courtesy sake, allow me to say good job, and well said (really - I mean it!). In an odd sort of way this discussion tip-toes on the borderline of that old "Is Rap Music?" debate.

Now all we can do really is sit back and wait to see if someone from outside the coffeeklotch (sp?) chimes in with the opposing opinion!

david d. mcintire said...

In defense of Babbitt: Aside from having his title changed from "The Composer as Specialist" to "Who Cares if You Listen?" the article suffers from being constantly taken out of context. This article was written at the height of the Cold War, a time when it was seen as essential to maintain academic parity with European power centers, and not just in math and science. Babbitt simply makes the same argument for music. I certainly disagree with his notion that music will only "advance" in the academy, but I'm also not especially threatened by that either. Music happens as it will and it's beyond the means of you or me or Babbitt to control its direction, much as we might want to. All of us have opinions that 30 years from now will be just as silly.

I don't think Babbitt is nearly as dogmatic as he's made out to be. This, after all, is a guy who IS a musician, played the clarinet and violin very well and knows more about Broadway musicals that anyone this side of Stephen Sondheim, who was his student. Babbitt even WROTE a musical or two himself, and not in serial style. He's a jazz nut, as anyone would notice if they'd take the time to listen to "All Set," and his "Minute Waltz" is pretty damn hilarious, whatever your feelings about serialism. There's plenty of Babbitt that doesn't do much for me, but I find that a lot of it is FAR, FAR more expressive than you'd expect. And downright funny.

On Cage: A man who continues to be misunderstood. If he's not a musician, I'll eat my clarinet. He played the piano his entire life and wrote and performed tons of his own percussion music, which if anyone takes a moment to look at the scores thereof, is pretty damn difficult. The 'Sonatas and Interludes' for prepared piano is a twentieth-century classic. Take a look at how many pianists have chosen to record it. This isn't because of some financial gravy train, it's because these musicians WANT to play it, and there's an audience that wants to hear it. Cage's 'Four Walls' predicted minimalism in the 1940s, his 'Song Books' and 'Europeras' are just plain fun. 'Cheap Imitation' updates Satie without losing his humor or brilliance. He was a huge threat to the European serialists because 'Music of Changes' was aurally more pleasing than total serialism. There are at least two dozen pieces by Cage that I'd personally be proud to have written. There's also at least as many that do nothing for me at all, but if I end up with his batting average at the end of my life, I'll be happy. If Cage rubs you the wrong way, then you're snug in the company of Boulez, Babbitt, Stockhausen, Thomson, Schoenberg, LaMontaigne, Hanson and many others. In the meantime, muscians keep playing his music for whatever reasons, but certainly not because it's easy.

I know nothing about academic life in Bowling Green, but if there's really an "either/or" choice forced between Babbitt and Cage, then things there are strange indeed. It would be like one's spiritual life being defined by either Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell versus the Maharesh Yogi. There's a lot of bandwidth in between that one could profitably occupy, while still learning from those extremes. And most of us have to live somewhere in the middle. I find the Babbitt/Cage dichotomy to be a set of false choices—there's plenty to be accepted and rejected on both sides. I have composed music that partakes of both philosphies, sometimes in the same piece. Ultimately, the sounds either satisfy or they don't.

david d. mcintire said...

Two last things and then I'll shut up: Reread Babbitt's article in light of the fact that he did some serious intelligence work during WW II (work that he refuses to speak of to this day), and was sent back from Washington to the math department at Princeton in part to support cryptography for the war effort. The mindset that saw the need for a cadre of crytographers to decode Axis documents would certainly see a similar need to train an elite group of American composers to match what was coming out of Darmstadt. Whether or not one agrees with that policy is another thing.

Secondly, in all of this discussion, it's worthwhile to pay close attention to what pisses you off. There's a lot of energy to be harnessed there, if you're open to examining those issues. I had a band teacher who hated everything I was interested in, from Yes to Webern. He basically told me I was wasting my time with all of it, it was all crap. Basically, for him music stopped at Mahler. Bruckner was an idiot, Stravinsky went off the rails right around 'Firebird.' It was a bummer having this guy as my only musical mentor through high school, but it gave me something to push against as well. Years later, I know where I stand in all of this, and I worked harder just to prove that this blinkered moron was wrong about me and what I valued.

Herr Vogler said...

Once again, Mr. McIntire, you're able to get me to think about something in a much more complex and multifaceted way without making me feel like an idiot for valuing what I do. This is one of the reasons I value your friendship, and your opinions for that matter, so much.