APPRECIATING MUSIC
WITHOUT BEING AN EXPERT.
I am, I know, a musical
barbarian. I cannot read music and I cannot play a musical instrument. When it
comes to singing, I can get away with declaiming things parlando so long as I’m part of a larger group and the people around
me are shouting loud enough to hide my voice. I have only a passing
acquaintance with the technical terms of music, although having a music teacher
for a wife, and having a brood of children who have all received some sort of
musical education, I have over the years learnt to distinguish my andante from my prestissimo, and I am aware that crescendo means the rising note and not the final crash, as
many people mistakenly think. Once I did plough my way through a book
explaining the structure of the classical symphony, and I went a little
cross-eyed. When my wife mentions a tonic
triad, I think she’s talking about Chinese gangsters peddling drug-infused
tonics.
I repeat, I am not a musician.
But here is a phenomenon which
drives my musically-literate wife crazy. If (most often on a car journey) we
turn on Radio NZ Concert halfway through a piece of what is miscalled
“classical” music, I am able either to name the composer or to place the
approximate date of the composition.
I hear the small orchestra and the
short movements and the classical chiselling of it and I say “Hmmm – Haydn”. Or
I hear the lush, overblown post-Wagnerian Late Romantic grandiosity and I say
“Ah yes – Richard Strauss.” Or that curious, full-orchestrated bleakness, like
ice dripping off trees, reveals Bela Bartok to me.
I’m not overplaying my accuracy.
I do have my failures, and sometimes they are spectacular. When I first heard
it (in a coming-in-halfway-through situation), I mistook Liszt’s spare “Prophet
Bird” for a 20th century composition, maybe by the likes of Erik
Satie. I once confidently identified as Stravinsky’s something by a New Zealand
composer. Oh woe! Still, I’m pretty good at this game, and it drives my wife
spare.
“How do you do that?” she asks,
when I’ve just accurately identified something.
“It just sounds different”, I
say, in my complete ignorance of the technicalities. The orchestration alone
(even if I can’t identify specifically how the instruments are deployed) will
tell me if it’s Late Medieval or Renaissance or Baroque or Classic or Romantic
or Late Romantic or Impressionist or Modernist, and it’s usually quite easy to
attach the probable composer’s name once the era is identified.
There is another element to my
untutored knowledge. I listen to a lot of classical music on CDs or RNZ Concert
or (the best classical music station I know) “Radio Swiss Classic” which I
listen to through iTunes on my computer. I love the gentle German-language
voices which announce the recordings without any other commentary – although if
I chose I could listen to the same play-list as “Radio Suisse Classique”, and
hear the announcements in French. Inevitably over the years, I’ve got to know
many pieces by ear, and so can easily slide in halfway through Berlioz’s
“Harold in Italy” or de Falla’s “Three-Cornered Hat” or Mozart’s “Jupiter”
symphony or Dvorak’s cello concerto or many others and know what’s cooking. And
there are favourites. Of course Beethoven’s Eroica, 5th and Pastoral
are the three greatest symphonies ever written (this is simply an objective
fact – not a matter for debate), just as Mozart’s Don Giovanni and Verdi’s Otello
are the two greatest operas ever written. (Wagner? Pfui!). But I would make a
case for the opening movement of Brahms’ 4th as the greatest single movement
of a symphony ever written – by which I mean, of course, that I love its “sea
surge” effect like incoming waves.
So – as you know I can – I could
witter on referring to many other beloved pieces (Oh! Elgar’s two completed
symphonies and his violin concerto and his cello concerto! Ah! Vaughan
William’s Symphonia Antartica!) But I
am forced to one overwhelming question.
Is there any value to
appreciating music in this uninformed way?
I would not dare entering into a
conversation with trained musicians about music, as I know I would have nothing
to contribute to it and would not be able to follow all the necessary technical
terms. But I would guarantee that I, and people like me, are more
representative of the symphony-concert-going audience than the
musically-trained. I know there is an art to producing all those musical
effects and colouration and emotional pulse. I do not have that art. But I can
recognize music as original or derivative or pastiche or genius or talent. I
can do this because I am familiar with it. I am the man who cannot paint but
who can still appreciate art and feel uplifted or inspired (or bored out of his
tree) by visiting art galleries.
I am loading my argument here, of
course, and I know some musicians who would tell me that I cannot have a full appreciation of music without some
training. Probably they are right. But I would reply that my head-on listener’s
knowledge of music is a sort of training. And I have the advantage of a wife
who can fill me in on the technical terms when I really need them. Besides
which, even if only in an instinctive and experiential sense, I understand the
structure of music and that is two thirds of the pleasure of listening.
Footnote: It is necessary to add that I could have written the
above opinion piece with reference to jazz rather than to “classical” music. I
spend as much time distinguishing my Jelly Roll Mortons from my Art Tatums as I
do distinguishing my Scriabins from my Shostakoviches. But jazz, being largely
unwritten, always consists of unique and individual performances; and when it
come to identifying it “blind”, one is listening to the quality of the
recording as much as to the performance. The monaural hiss of even the best Bix
Beiderbecke recording is quite different from the multi-directional recording
perfection of the best Wynton Marsalis. And if I want to get down off my
pedestal, I must also admit that I spend quite a lot of time listening to
Broadway show tunes and general “pop” as well as to “classical” or jazz –
although it is the last two genres that are most musically nourishing.
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