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Music as an Art: From Sketch Of A New Esthetic Of Music
I stumbled upon this wonderful theoretical work by Ferruccio Busoni that really fascinated my thoughts on the esthetic of music. He ventures beyond musical theories into the thoughts of the essence of music itself. He was an Italian composer, pianist, conductor, editor, writer, and teacher. Who, throughout his career, challenged the status quo of musical thought. I still am amazed at the elegance of writing held in the many works I read through from the early 20th century. I hope you find it as joyful and thought-provoking on the music as an art as I do.
Characterization Of The Arts
Art-forms are the more lasting, the more closely they adhere to the nature of their individual species of art, the purer they keep their essential means and ends
Sculpture relinquishes the expression of the human
Architecture has its fundamental form, growth from below upward, prescribed by static necessity; window and roof necessarily provide the intermediate and finishing configuration; these are eternal and inviolable requirements of the art
But all arts, resources and forms ever aim at the one end, namely, the imitation of nature and the interpretation of human feelings.
Architecture, sculpture, poetry
Music, compared with them, is a child that has learned to walk, but must still be led. It is a virgin art, without experience in life and suffering
Music as an art, our so-called occidental music, is hardly four hundred years old; its state is one of development, perhaps the very first stage of
We have formulated rules, stated principles, laid down laws;—we apply laws made for maturity to a child that knows nothing of responsibility!
Young as it is, this child, we already recognize that it possesses one radiant attribute which signalizes it beyond all its elder sisters. And the lawgivers will not see this marvelous attribute, lest their laws should be thrown to the winds. This child—it floats on air! It touches not the earth with its feet. It knows no law of gravitation. And, it is well nigh incorporeal. Its material is transparent. It is sonorous air. It is almost Nature herself. And above all, it is—free.
But freedom is something that mankind
Absolute Music
Music was born free; and to win freedom is its destiny. It will become the most complete of all reflexes of Nature by reason of its untrammeled immateriality. Even the poetic word ranks lower in point of incorporealness. It can gather together and disperse, can be motionless repose or wildest tempestuosity; it has the extremest heights perceptible to man—what other art has these?—and its emotion seizes the human heart with that intensity which is independent of the “idea.”
It realizes a temperament, without describing it, with the mobility of the soul, with the swiftness of consecutive moments; and this, where painter or sculptor can represent only one side or one moment, and the poet tardily communicates a temperament and its manifestations by words.
Therefore, representation and description are not the nature of music; herewith we declare the invalidity of program-music, and arrive at the question: What are the aims of music?
ABSOLUTE Music! What the lawgivers mean by this, is perhaps remotest of all from the Absolute in music. “Absolute music” is a form-play without poetic program, in which the form is intended to have the leading part. But Form, in itself, is the opposite pole of absolute music, on which was bestowed the divine prerogative of buoyancy, of freedom from the limitations of matter. In a picture, the illustration of a sunset ends with the frame; the limitless natural phenomenon is enclosed in quadrilateral bounds; the cloud-form chosen for depiction remains unchanging for ever. Music can grow brighter or darker, shift hither or yon, and finally fade away like the sunset glow itself; and instinct leads the creative musician to employ the tones that press the same key within the human breast, and awaken the same response, as the processes in Nature.
Per contra, “absolute music” is something very sober, which reminds one of
From Sketch of A New Esthetic of Music by Ferruccio Busoni (Trans. by Dr. TH. Baker) © 1911.
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I have two degrees in guitar performance and was privileged to study under Aaron Shearer, Tom Kikta, David Skantar, Ken Karsh, Tim Bedner, and currently Christopher Berg. Outside my editorial work on this blog, I teach full-time across many genres including classical, jazz, blues, rock, funk, and metal.
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