Monday, December 10, 2012

My paper--catalyst for discussion?

I'm posting my paper on the blog, since most of our ideas were communal and sprouted from class discussion. Whoever wants to read it and comment/discuss is welcome. It's long, and I wrote it in a short period of time, so I apologize in advance for any grammatical inconsistencies. :P Anyway, Happy Hanukkah, Happy Kwanzaa, Happy Winter Solstice, and... I guess... Merry Christmas.

(Now I don't have to wake up before noon to turn this in. Yay!)

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Preservation and Innovation: The Future of Classical Music





















Zoe Grabow
First Year Seminar: Understanding Music
December 10, 2012















I wanted to major in music performance because of an annual variety show our high school music department put on called Fusion. It wasn’t much, but the audience screamed for us three nights a year. It was different from all of the other concerts, the ones to which parents would come to placate their kids and whip out their cell phones when they thought nobody was looking. Fusion was different. I, my show choir, and other student musicians put copious time into it, both during school and after hours. We groused as much as we sang. Then, when show night came, those hours disappeared. The audience refueled us. It was cliché, but all the more true because of it. Because of Fusion, I came into college knowing a little about musical relationships and the energy that lashed us all together, among us and then out to the audience.
This was an idea I came to this class with, and the reaffirmation of something I’ve consciously experienced endeared me to Christopher Small’s “musicking” lecture that we read in class and opened me to more of his ideas.[1] One I found novel in particular was the use of music as a verb, not a noun.[2] This taught me a lot about the contextual value of music and what went into making it. Small elucidates by stating that music is a process more than a product, whether in the compositional or performing stages. Composers put many more hours into creating a work and performers rehearsing it than a performance really lasts, and even the resulting performance is a process—a budding bond between audience, performers, and composers. Reading Small’s lecture allowed my experiences to latch onto far bigger ideas. I have a habit of taking linguistics for granted, and before this class, I would not have considered music to be anything other than a noun because in order for “music” to be a verb without the preceding “make,” rules would have to be bent. (This is coming from a person who strives to differentiate between who and whom in all instances regardless of how it comes off, says “As am/do I” as opposed to “Me too,” and corrects herself in conversation immediately after realizing an error.)
Common statistics state that one-eighth of an iceberg visibly protrudes from a surface of water while the other seven-eighths remain submerged beneath. I liken this to a performance vs. rehearsal/composition ratio in both time and effort. The idea of “musicking” is more meaningful to me than anything else I’ve learned in this class because it denotes that music brings all of us together, and not just in the obvious way, not just in the finished product.
“Musicking” is a task that integrates people of many varying occupations.
“We might even stretch the meaning on occasion to include what the lady is doing who takes the tickets on the door, or the hefty men who shift the piano around or the cleaners who clean up afterwards, since their activities all affect the nature of the event which is a musical performance,” said Small.[3]
There are no limitations on who has an affect on music, and music thus envelops us all in a way that allows it to wash over us and allows us to shape it as well as each other in our identical, equal power of involvement. Music becomes organic. That is a beautiful idea, and it enticed me. Furthermore, it embodied for me everything we learned in this class—and also why I wanted to major in music to begin with.
Unfortunately, there are obstacles to this unity. Fewer people are showing interest in classical concerts because of age[4], venue[5], and projected stereotypes[6], among other reasons. Les Dryer addressed the first in the New York Times last month:

Now, while classic rock remains a vibrant radio format, and artists like the Rolling Stones, Billy Joel, The Who and Elton John continue to be popular, middle-agers who never migrated to classical music are content with the songs they grew up on. Too many of those listeners were never introduced to the power of Beethoven, the elegance of Mozart or the soulfulness of Mahler, and if they were, it was the aural equivalent of “eating your vegetables.”[7]

The location where a concert is held influences the ambience, and many modern audiences are uncomfortable with and/or turned off by an excessively formal environment. Some of classical music’s notoriety for stuffiness is deserved, but coupled with the reality are people who are so eager to place labels on the genre that the connotation has become cringeworthy.
I hate ‘classical music’: not the thing but the name,” Alex Ross stated in the opening paragraph of an essay that appeared in the New Yorker. “It traps a tenaciously living art in a theme park of the past. It cancels out the possibility that music in the spirit of Beethoven could still be created today. It banishes into limbo the work of thousands of active composers who have to explain to otherwise well-informed people what it is they do for a living.”[8]
Classical music does not extend a universal bond to a majority of people who lack an interest in it. One of the leading obligations of classical musicians is to preserve and maintain interest in their craft to ensure that there will always be demand enough for it to be able to function in a capitalist economy. The question, of course, concerns how to put a series of attainable solutions in practice to produce this result. Lamenting our losses and licking our wounds won’t change or better the problem or mask the fact that some changes need to be made to integrate classical music into a modern society, no matter how much some traditionalists dread it. (I am one of those traditionalists.) How do we make classical music meaningful to a larger audience again, and once we get there, how do we retrace our steps to a universal unity?
This is not an argument for proselytizing the masses—in the first place, that’s unethical, and in the second place, it doesn’t work. Rather, we need a larger audience and revenue in order to make the music that we want. Orchestras all over the country are filing for bankruptcy, and musicians are taking pay cuts that make it virtually impossible to make a living, let alone enjoy one. In a world of constant cultural change, classical music masks its own evolution with a propriety that remains static, or at least changes more slowly than other artistic genres.
My dream is a world where we don’t have to worry about any of these problems, and may Pangloss smite me down for his notion that this is the best of all possible worlds. It’s only the best possible world for classical music if we throw in the towel—and there is still a plethora of viable solutions to try.
My favorite concerts to attend here at DePauw are reminiscent of beat culture, with musical improvisations and poetry reading. I like to close my eyes and listen just as hard: sometimes to the music, and sometimes to my thoughts. At the George Wolfe concert in particular, I remember the music taking my mind to a different place and allowing it to infiltrate all of my senses. I use music as a stimulant for other expressive arenas, writing in particular. After that concert, I went back to my room to write, and while I don’t recall the word count at this point, it was somewhere in the thousands. Many people seem to realize that music is a gateway to other areas, but they see classical music as one-dimensional, inert, and dry. Whatever gets done to bring classical music back to the forefront needs to shatter this stereotype.
Feasible solutions were brought up in this class, too, especially as extracted from the success of iDePod. (For a few unreasonable minutes at the beginning, I was unsure about the ability for audiences with different musical preferences to coalesce. After everybody clapped for everybody else, I was presently relieved.) We’ve got the right idea for bringing classical music back to the radar, and I believe a large part of that resulted from eliminating formality and allowing our audience to trust their instincts. We discussed the fact that they had found a balance between respect and casualness, which maximized everybody’s sense of comfort and enthusiasm, including the performers. (Didn’t somebody say that the Dells were nervous before going on? I bet that that didn’t last long.) This was an invaluable experience for me because it renewed my faith in audiences who could stay engaged (no more texting soccer moms), and it also gave me a place in helping to solve classical music’s plight. I still think that soirees are the way to go—they take care of the venue and formality grief, and they manage to retain class regardless. (Besides, one could always throw in some philosophical discourse a la salons!) In future, then, I plan on arranging some with friends and inviting more friends.

Works Cited
Dreyer, Les. “Sunday Dialogue: Is Classical Music Dying?” The New York Times, Opinion, November 24, 2012. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/25/opinion/sunday/sunday-dialogue-is-classical-music-dying.html?pagewanted=1&ref=opinion&_r=0(accessed December 10, 2012).
Alex Ross. “Onward & Upward With the Arts.” The New Yorker, February 16, 2004. http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2004/02/16/040216fa_fact4?printable=true¤tPage=all(accessed December 10, 2012).
George Slade. Musicians of the Minnesota Orchestra, “Agora or Temple.” Last modified 2012. Accessed December 10, 2012. http://www.minnesotaorchestramusicians.org/?page_id=3634.
Small, Christopher. “Musicking: A Ritual in Social Science.” Lecture, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, AU, June 6, 1995. Accessed December 10, 2012. http://www.musekids.org/musicking.html


[1]. Christopher Small. “Musicking: A Ritual in Social Science.” Lecture, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, AU, June 6, 1995. Accessed December 10, 2012. http://www.musekids.org/musicking.html

[2]. Ibid.

[3]. Ibid.

[4]. Les Dreyer. “Sunday Dialogue: Is Classical Music Dying?” The New York Times, Opinion, November 24, 2012. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/25/opinion/sunday/sunday-dialogue-is-classical-music-dying.html?pagewanted=1&ref=opinion&_r=0(accessed December 10, 2012).

[5]. George Slade. Musicians of the Minnesota Orchestra, “Agora or Temple.” Last modified 2012. Accessed December 10, 2012. http://www.minnesotaorchestramusicians.org/?page_id=3634.

[6]. Dreyer, “Is Classical Music Dying?”

[7]. Ibid.
[8]. Alex Ross. “Onward & Upward With the Arts.” The New Yorker, February 16, 2004. http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2004/02/16/040216fa_fact4?printable=true¤tPage=all(accessed December 10, 2012).

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