Earlier this summer, I read Constant Lambert’s Music Ho! for the first time. If I were a rich man and a betting man, and if such statelets of affairs were fact-checkable by third parties, I would bet a million American dollars (or, what would more or less come to the same thing these days, a million British pounds) that there is no longer interval between my first learning of a book’s existence and my finally getting around to reading it than the one that gapes into the decades behind my eventual reading of Music Ho! For I first became aware of it via the article on Lambert in the encyclopedically organized second edition of the Oxford Junior Companion to Music, which I received as a Christmas or birthday present from my parents in 1982 or 1983 and which accordingly was the first book on “serious” or “classical” music (or at least prevailingly on that subject, for the second-edition OJCM, although dominated by treatments of such “serious” or “classical”-musical subjects as sonata form, counterpoint, and the great and not-so-great composers perforce contained grotesquely oversized articles on jazz, the Beatles, and rock simply in virtue of being a work of post-1960s provenance [and although I’m not sure I have ever even glanced at the first edition, I assume that it contains at least a grotesquely oversized article on jazz simply in virtue of being a work of post-1920s provenance]) that I was in a position to read at leisure. As to why it took so long for me to get around to reading Music Ho!, the super-prosaic first half of the bipartite answer to that question is that despite being immediately smitten with its title as much because as in spite of its inscrutability (for having not yet read a line of Shakespeare at the age of ten or eleven, I did not know it was a quotation from the Bard [and indeed, despite having read all the lines of Shakespeare several times over by then, at the commencement of this past summer’s reading I thought it a playful misquotation of Twelfth Night’s “Westward ho!” {or perhaps even of Ben Jonson’s use of that Jacobean London boatmen’s exclamation as the title of one of his plays} and was stood corrected only by Lambert’s own helpful reminder within the book’s pages that he had taken the title verbatim from the heroine’s summoning of musicians in Antony and Cleopatra]) I never saw the book shelved alongside the public and university library-housed volumes from which I was obliged to derive almost the entirety of my self-education on “serious” or “classical” music over the ensuing decade. The second half of that answer flows not-unpoetically from the efficient cause referenced in the first, which is to say that while roughly the first two-thirds of that decade witnessed a piquing-cum-increasing of my interest in MH! given that the bulk of the meta-musical volumes I was then reading were works that like MH! and the OJCM were of twentieth-century British provenance and that therefore tended to evince and promulgate the sort of bluffly ecumenical-yet-fundamentally conservative attitude to music en bloc that permeated twentieth-century British musicology, music appreciation, and music criticism (and that, incidentally, continues to permeate them today at least among the practitioners of these practices who were already active in the year 2000), certain meta-musical writings of non-British provenance that I began reading at about the beginning of the second third of that decade, including certain such writings by Theodor W. Adorno, evinced and promulgated a much more snootily discriminating-cum-fundamentally modernistic attitude to music en bloc and en fine, and as this attitude supplanted the twentieth-century British one as the meta-musical attitude I deferred to by default (and hence more or less regarded as my own), especially in the light of MH!’s subtitle, A Study of Music in Decline, I came to regard MH! as a dedicated vessel of the twentieth-century British attitude and thereby to regard it as most likely-ly unworthy of my attention. In blunt terms, in terming the twentieth-century British attitude ecumenical-yet-fundamentally conservative I mean that while it grudgingly afforded room to the “greatest hits” of post-tonal music like Pierrot Lunaire and Wozzeck and even to some of the “greatest hits” of post-post-tonal music like Le Marteau sans Maitre and Die Soldaten, it basically thought that music history had taken a wrong turn in abandoning tonality and that the only virtuous or aesthetically redeemable living composers were the ones who were still writing (or had returned to writing) in a tonal idiom. For me the locus classicus of a polemic embodying this attitude—and perhaps also the culmination thereof (for in dating from the early-to-mid-1990s it is one of the more recent such polemics I have encountered)—is one transmitted to me by the cellist Julian Lloyd- Webber (younger brother of the abominable co-perpetrator of Cats and Phantom of the Opera) via the trouncing of it in an essay by Charles Rosen (next to Adorno probably the non-British meta-musical writer to whom my current meta-musical outlook is most deeply indebted). Lloyd-Weber argued not only that tonal music was aesthetically superior to post-tonal music but also that declining attendance at concerts of “serious” or music scene was entirely up-chalkable to the refusal of the preponderance of currently active composers to write tonal music owing to their membership of a cabal or mafia of post-tonal composers that had dominated the contemporary “serious” or “classical” music scene for many decades. If, Lloyd-Webber contended, more present-day composers would only follow the example of a heroic tonal outlier like the symphonist Malcolm Arnold (best known to the public as a film composer, and super-best known thereto for the musical soundtrack of Bridge on the River Kwai with its “iconic” whistled march [whose “iconicity” perhaps motivated Weber to cite Arnold in particular as a norm, although he must surely have known that the march had actually not been written by Arnold but by a much earlier composer {and he might very well even have known that that composer’s name was F. J. Ricketts}), why then then the bums would come rushing back towards the seats of the symphony halls like one’s favorite metaphorical vehicle for a set of entities individually inexorably attracted to more or less any odd member of a set of other entities. (“Moths to a flame” obviously won’t do because we are talking about multiple seats as well as multiple bums, and “more or less any odd member” must be stipulated because concertgoers are both generally utterly unattached to specific seats and highly choosy about specific tiers of seats.) To this shopworn kvetchfest Rosen rejoined with age-appropriate crotchetiness (for he was by then in his seventh or eighth decade and Lloyd-Webber only in his fourth or fifth) that there was or were no shortage of living professional tonal composers, that to the admittedly small extent that new works were commissioned by current “serious”-or -“classical” music-performing ensembles they were prevailingly works composed by those selfsame sorts of composers, such that if these ensembles were failing to draw bums to seats with contemporary works this could only be because they were happy enough listening to the established pre-ca.-1920-originating tonal repertoire—to the three Bs plus Haydn, Mozart, Tchaikovsky, et a half-dozen al.—and felt no need to have it supplemented with newer works in tonal idioms; and that if it seemed to Lloyd-Webber that the new “serious”-or-“classical” music scene was dominated by a cabal or mafia of post-tonal composers, this was merely because certain works by living post-tonal composers had attracted more enthusiastic advocates among musicians—musicians who championed them by going out of their way to play them—than most works by living tonal composers had done. I expected Music Ho! to propound an argument more or less exactly consubstantial with that promulgated by Lloyd-Webber if slightly more excusable in the light of its axiomatic absence of knowledge of the history of musical performance in the last three-fifths of the twentieth century (and indeed slightly more redeemable in the light of the incorporation of a sub-handful of tonal composers of the second fifth of the twentieth century [at the moment I can think of only three: Ravel, Prokofiev, and Shostakovich] into the pantheon of the three Bs et al.). And yet I did not dismiss Music Ho! altogether, and indeed I retained a desire and a semi-plan to read it, for in the abovementioned British musicological works it had always been described as a work of impressive if eccentric panache, and as I was coming to appreciate these works more and more for their distinctively British eccentricity even as their value as meta-musical cicerones continued to depreciate chez moi (I have, incidentally, tried to communicate something of this crescently ambivalent impression in “Weasel Goes the Pop’s” account of the OJCM’s instructions on writing music by hand using conventional notation and score-paper), I could not but think of it as a sort of Holy Grail of a time capsule of early-to-mid-twentieth century British eccentricity—for after all, I reasoned, if even these chaps who were as Britishly eccentric as mad cow-afflicted sheepdogs found this Lambert cove a bit loopy, why then by Jove, he could not but be (or have been) a full-blown corker of an early-to-mid-twentieth-century British original. So Music Ho! had acquired a sort of ingratiating if slightly gamy period aura in my eyes (and stomach); I looked forward to reading it with something of the same slightly wincing semi-eagerness with which I looked (and continue to look) forward to reading Evelyn Waugh’s wartime novels, which meant that because, like those novels, it did not obtrude myself upon my attention either in the papyral flesh (to this day I’m not sure I ever espied it in the stacks of the central branch of Baltimore’s Enoch Pratt Free Library, my most recent big library of frequentation [where one would have expected to find a book as once-famous as Music Ho!, at least until the Pratt went the way of all other public libraries by consigning the bulk of its collection to behind-the-scenes storage {if not the incinerator}]) or spiritually, in the form of recommendations from friends or the ubiquitous book-peddling robots of the company that I will not and I daresay need not name, I did not make a priority of seeking it out. But at about the most recent turn of the year, a mention-cum-quotation of MH! in another book both pushed it to the very front of the queue of British eccentricity and thrust it into the near-front of quite a different queue of my readerly curiosity’s jobseeker’s centre ([sic] for we must stick to the British nomenclature, right?) and thereby—i.e., in transforming it into a hybrid object of readerly curiosity thithterto unknown to me—pushed it quite close to the front of the master-queue of the centre, a.k.a. the list of the four or five books that I planned to read next. The other book was Richard Weaver’s Ideas Have Consequences, which I believe I started reading for the first time late last autumn (i.e., that of 2023) and finished late last winter or early last spring (i.e., that of 2023-24 or 2024, respectively), a book my lecture of which in relation to that of Music Ho! may be likened to the aftward or more deeply seated member of any number of pairs of entities—say, the viola part in a work of chamber music in which thousands of other inner voices are preposterously interposed between the second violin part (that part corresponding to the moment when I learned of the existence of IHC) and the first violin-part, that first violin-part corresponding to the moment when I learned of the existence of Music Ho!; or one of the innermost right curved brackets of a polynominal equation whose leftmost curved bracket corresponds to the moment when I learned of the existence of Music Ho!—in other words, Ideas Have Consequences is both one of the most recent books I have ever heard of and one of the books that I have most recently finished reading, but (obviously) not quite as recently as I have finished reading Music Ho! This belatedness of IHC in my reading-history is “worth mentioning” mainly on account of IHC’s congeniality to my reactionary-cum-pessimistic Weltanschauung and its inevitable points of contact with the writings of one of my most anciently seated favorite latter-day Jeremiahs, Theodor W. Adorno (whose work I first heard of in the course of the abovementioned first decade of my musicological autodidactic project, specifically via the footnotes of the British music-writer Donald Mitchell’s last book on the music of Gustav Mahler). I term these POCs inevitable because IHC, a near-exact contemporary of TWA’s Minima Moralia (publication dates: 1948 [IHC] and 1951 [MM]) self-depreciatingly ([sic] on the first i!) styles itself “another book about the dissolution of the West” (avoiding sliding into an abject averral of utterly futile superfluity only via the omission of a prepositive “yet”), and TWA’s shoulder-bruisingly frequent cold-shouldering of cold-call offers of a ten-foot pole with which to touch Oswald Spengler & co. notwithstanding, his own corpus is and was effectively one big Jeremiad “about the dissolution of the West,” and when two works comment in the same attitude on the same topic, they are inevitably going to tender sub-topical assertions and arguments that are mutually similar if not always or even ever quite mutually complementary. And so Weaver inevitably proves to be of something of the same mind about music as Adorno. True, unlike Adorno, he finds no potentially redemptive quality in modern “serious” music (and indeed, as near as I can recall or retrieve, he does not mention by name any composer more recent than Debussy), but like Adorno he does not think at all highly of jazz and regards it as inherently and irretrievably regressive, although he also pointedly disparages its “arrangements”—its characteristic treatments of instrumentation—as “cacophonous,” a word that, owing to its exclusive subjective field of reference, I cannot imagine Adorno’s employing so straightforwardly in his direct appraisal of any musical phenomenon, and indeed a quick digi-search of TWA’s Gesammelte Werke reveals to me that it contains only two occurrences of “cacophonous” or any of its nearly related German and English words therein, both of them being “kakophonisch,” and that one of them is clasped in a pair of nose-clothes-pinning inverted commas keeping TWA at least ten ten-foot-pole lengths from its original employer, his favorite Watschmann, the typical early twentieth-century bourgeois listener, who, says Teddie (only in German and in the passive voice), “defames as ‘cacophonous’ everything that does not conform to the ideal of sonically sensual hedonism”; and in the other he is employing the word with deliberate licentiousness by way of distinguishing his super-refined-cum-super-advanced musical subjectivity from that of the just-mentioned Watschmann (here again I am translating from a German text): “There are modern compositions that insinuate occasional tonal triads into their fabric. It is such triads and not the dissonances that are cacophonous.” Adorno does not really mean here that these triads, these intrinsically consonant chords, are harsh-sounding when he heard on their own; he merely means that at least to a truly up-to-date ear they sound out of place amid so many dissonant chordal neighbors. As regarded jazz arrangements, Adorno would have asserted to Weaver (and presumably could have asserted to him at some point, what with their both residing in the US at the end of the 40s and TWA’s pal Horkheimer’s having professionally sojourned at Weaver’s academic home base, the University of Chicago [although I own I don’t know and can’t be bothered to find out whether Weaver was already at the U of C at the start of Horkheimer’s sojurn]) that in the main they ought to be regarded as cacophonous only in this polemically licentious sense, that to any truly up-to-date ear they could sound unpleasant only because they had not surrendered unreservedly to “the emancipation of the dissonance.” And even on the questions of what in the tradition of great Austro-German music jazz had regressed from and at what point the regression had begun occurring Weaver and Adorno were not of exactly one mind. For Adorno, the just-mentioned tradition had “in a certain very real” if qualified “sense” reached its zenith in the music of Beethoven inasmuch as via his compositional modus operandi of endlessly ramifying variation within the productive constraints of the tonic-dominant harmonic system, Beethoven had given the fullest authentic scope to the expressive potentialities of the autonomous individual (a.k.a. the “subject” in the Kantian sense) while subsequent composers, beginning with Schubert and bottoming out with Richards Wagner and Strauss, had “in a certain very real sense” gone soft in a jazzward direction by reducing self-expression to the expression of sentimental emotions and thereby surrendered to the historical forces that were most perniciously destructive of the individual’s autonomy. For Weaver, by contrast, Beethoven’s self-assertion already marked a moment of decline because the aristocratic hierarchy against which it had asserted itself had itself merited perfect preservation, and the composer whose work had tendered the most eloquent argument in that hierarchy’s favor had been one of Beethoven’s immediate predecessors, Mozart. Perhaps not quite needless if not quite needful to say, Adorno would have blanched at (and perhaps actually did blanch at) this characterization of Mozart, whom he regarded as much more of a proto-Beethovenian individual than as a “shoeshine boy for the ruling elite” of the Ancien Regime. Howbeit, it is to the support of this characterization and of his larger aristocratophilic argument that Weaver dedicates his citation of Lambert, which is brief enough that I can quote it in its entirety:
Especially significant was the
steady decay of symphonic form, which effectually mirrored the progressive
dissolution of the class system. A modern critic [i.e., Lambert] has remarked
that “the whole framework of society, whose relation to the individual
symbolizes the cadences and codas that gently restrain the flow of Mozart’s passionate
line, is crumbling away if not already completely dedicated.” We are even told
[by Lambert] that the symphonic form was repellent to Moussorgsky because its
first-movement predominance signified to him aristocratic domination.
So as I just mentioned, in certain respects this is not very
Adornan. But as far as my readerly self of late very late 2023 or very early
2024 was concerned, its degree of divergence from Adorno was more than
adequately supplemented by its divergence from the twentieth-century British
musicological declensionist party line. For (so I reflected in very late 2023
or very early 2024) that party line had certainly not been signalized by the
faintest trace of patricianism: it emphatically had not defended good old-fashioned
tonal serious music on the grounds that that music had kept the lower orders in
their place; to the contrary, it had evinced unalloyed joy at the general democratization
of British society, and even if it had seldom if ever explicitly defended
tonality on behalf of the average British prole or peasant, it had made it
transparently clear—mainly through its championing of home-grown composers like
Holst and Vaughan Williams whose melodic material was drawn extensively from English
folksong and hymnody—that it regarded tonal serious music as being fit for
consumption by the lowliest of churls as by the loftiest of toffs and that if
there was anybody whom it thought deserved to be called a snob in the proper
sense that anybody was the composer or champion of post-tonal music with his
unstinting disdain for the aural cravings of a mass listenership. The tiny
passage from Music Ho! quoted-cum-paraphrased
by Weaver suggested that he was a was a specimen of an animal that I had always
regarded as entirely chimerical—viz., the “elitist” British twentieth-century
music critic, and indeed, my disbelief in the existence of such a creature
prompted me to consult the Wikipedia entry on Lambert post-haste by way of
reassuring myself that I had not been completely
mistaken all those years in assuming he had (had) anything whatsoever in common with his spießbürgerlich compatriots, and
happily unhappily, I did at (or in) that entry find at least darning evidence
of a populist streak in his thought—a streak most strikingly streaking (i.e.,
exhibitionistically naked) in his notion that jazz was better suited to the
Anglophone singing voice because more attuned to its native rhythms than the
Italian arias and German Lieder on which all “serious” writing for the voice by
English composers had been patterned. Perhaps not quite needless to say (i.e.,
because received opinion is so universal and obdurate in its contention that
Adorno completely misunderstood jazz [i.e., inasmuch as all the music on which
he had founded his notion of it supposedly been “fake” jazz {whereas there is
abundant evidence that he was as hip (however reluctantly, out of mere
professional necessity) to the hottest jazzmen as most ardent jitterbugger}]
that the reader may very well have assumed that my already-signaled fandom of
Adorno excluded fandom of his jazz-execration, such that he or she may have
erroneously attributed a mien or in a tone of po-faced disdain worthy of TWA
himself to my remark that both TWA and Dick Weaver disliked jazz), as I admired
Adorno as much for his disparagement of jazz as for his eulogization of “serious”
modern music, I could not but in the
first instance regard this revelation as a strike against Lambert. En revanche, I could not but be
sneakingly heartened by the revelation inasmuch as it gratified one of my most
ancient, deep-seated, and unubudgeable aesthetic prejudices—a prejudice against
“serious” music sung in English (a prejudice, incidentally, that I [had] made
public in my blog-posted admission that all English operatic and liederisch singing off-puttingly
reminded me of the improvised operas-for-tiny-tots concocted by the
professional bass-baritone John Reardon and several unprofessional singers on Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood). What if, I
wondered, vis-à-vis jazz Lambert had somehow miraculously squared the circle of
meta-aesthetic rectitude without circling TWA as a square—i.e., if he had
somehow salvaged certain peripheral redeemable elements (and only those elements) of jazz overlooked
by Adorno and had consigned the remainder thereof to the same dustbin or
ash-heap as TWA had consigned it? By the time I was posing this yearning
question to myself, my motives for reading Music
Ho! had accumulated to the point of reaching a kind of critical mass of
urgency-cum-curiosity that I was resolved to read the blessed book forthwith if it didn’t turn out to be
one of those many long out-of-print-yet-non-yet-public-domain volumes that was
now only purchasable used for several-dozen dollars or more. Happily it turned
out to be one of those few long-out-of-print volumes that were (and are)
purchasable in a Kindle edition for less than a single-dozen dollars, and so
within minutes of forming (or being formed by) this resolution, I had the book
in my hands and was commencing my Kraszanahorkaian fairground tour of the exhibit-exhausting
beast (the beast still being Lambert, of course, and Music Ho! being an entirely adequate synecdoche for him, at least
qua writer [or, rather, more specifically {for Lambert’s own repeated odd use
of “writer” as an alternative to “composer” somehow prompts me to provide such
specification at least while treating of his work} writer in natural verbal language], inasmuch as it is the only book
he ever published). And now that I have finished the tour I can in all candor
and frankness say that it was more than worth the price of admission whether
one defines that price in monetary or chronographic terms, which is to say at
no point during my lecture of Music Ho!
did Lambert prove pigeonhole-able as just another exponent of this or that
position or attitude already familiar to me. Above all, to-his-credit-wise,
while being ever-unmistakable as anything other than an English
natural-language writer of the late-early twentieth century, he proved
un-pigeonhole-able as yet another specimen of Britannicus musicalis amicus vulgorum, as just another one of the
abovementioned bluff-and-tweedy British writers on music whose “elitist”
conception of Mozart had been a mere momentary twinge of old-school Tory
patricianism. This is not to say that Lambert proved to be an altogether
intellectually admirable figure, that he shewed himself to be indisputably a
man of high genius putting his genius to sound work according to sound
principles from the first page of MH!
to its last. It is also not to say that Lambert’s abovementioned admiration of
jazz and undialectical nostalgia for “the class system” turned out to be
fleeting or marginal enough to his argument to make for an effortless
assimilation of his overall conception of the recent and prospective fortunes
of music to that of Adorno. It is, however, to say that like that of numerous
works of cultural criticism (for lack of a better blanket genre-designation) by
Adorno’s Anglophone contemporaries—notably Lionel Trilling, Jacques Barzun, and
David Riesman—Music Ho!’s argument
complemented and enriched Adorno’s on its topic at so many points as to make me
wish that its author had had a lengthy chinwag with Adorno so that the two of
them could have hashed out and clarified their differences on the equally
numerous other points on which they diverged from each other so that the effort
of arriving at a more-or-less adequate understanding of that topic would prove
less onerous a job of work for posterity (or at least the portion of posterity
embodied in the present writer); even if, to judge by Adorno’s dismissive
appraisal of Riesman’s Lonely Crowd as
bearing as much resemblance to his own sociological work as (effectively [for although
my imperfection of memory and bereavement of access to the source of the remark
oblige me to coarsen TWA’s phrasing, the analogy was most certainly framed in
oenological-cum-geographical terms]) a can of Budweiser to an Achtel of Riesling (this despite TWA’s citation
of The Lonely Crowd in unqualified
support of his argument in one of his essays), in each such case a chinwag
would have proved quite a tough slog from the very beginning on account of the presumptive
difficulty of finding a bar or restaurant equipped to supply each conversant
his favorite tipple. Anyway, inasmuch as I am from here onwards going to be setting
about the intrinsically tricky business of comparing a single book (Lambert’s)
to a massive corpus of books and essays (Adorno’s, plus a smattering of the
writings of Rosen and perhaps one or two other representative
later-cum-non-British writers about music), and inasmuch as despite their
convergence or quasi-convergence at certain significant points, Adorno’s and
Lambert’s lines of thought differ quite radically from each other in their
overall trajectories, the safest if not necessarily the most efficient modus
operandi is perhaps to address the points of convergence or quasi-convergence
from the outset and work outwards and backwards from there. These points seem
to be roughly divisible between shared attitudes to specific composers and shared
conceptions of the phenomenology of listening—of the sorts of experiences
listening to music has exacted and entailed in the course of the ages. As
regards to the attitudes to composers, the convergences effectively boil down
to a shared qualified admiration of Bartòk qua exponent of an authentically
modern “folksiness,” a shared unqualified admiration of Satie qua heroic
non-participator in the main trajectory of the evolution of early-twentieth
century music, and an unqualified disdain for Stravinsky and Hindemith qua
neoclassical “restaurateurs” (to employ in the plural Arnold Schoenberg’s [whom
I incidentally just thought of including in the list of convergees before
concluding that Lambert’s attitude to him was ultimately a sort of grudging
respect and hence too distant from Adorno’s qualified adulation] wittily
bivalent term of disparagement for Stravinsky alone). As regards the
phenomenology of listening, the convergences would seem to require too much
“thick description” to be amenable to down-boiling and should therefore perhaps
be addressed first, as this un-down-boilability would seem in turn to render
them less felicitous as a starting-point for the abovementioned
outwards-cum-backwards-working. Being near-exact contemporaries born in the
early-to-middle nineteen-oughties (TWA in 1903, CL in 1905), Adorno and Lambert
were both peculiarly historically well-placed to register and document perhaps
the most substantial and certainly the speediest transformation of this
phenomenology to date (not only their date but also ours)—viz., its electrification via radio broadcasting
studios and receivers and electric microphones and loudspeakers, a
transformation which seems to have taken place over a very short period lasting
only from about 1923 to about 1930. If they had been born only a decade
earlier, they would have come of age in the heyday of the acoustic gramophone
record played through those massive “iconic” inverted ear-trumpets of the type
that appears with the dog in the record-company logo; a heyday that was also the
heyday of late-stage music hall (whence the prominence thereof in the poems of
T. S. Eliot [b. 1889]), the ragtime sheet-music hit, the player piano, and the
silent short film accompanied by a live pianist—in short, a microepoch in which
while music-listening had been both thoroughly massified and engirded by what
Adorno’s friend Walt Benjamin (b. 1892, and hence exactly too early by the
interval now in point) would have termed aura of urban life, it still had to
rely entirely on the unabetted air for the transmission of the music from its
source to the listener’s ear. Had they been born only a decade later, they
would still have been in short trousers even at the end of the transformation
and hence too young to write about it clearly and dispassionately “in real
time” and further hence relegated to writing about it many years later in the
sort of quasi-Proustian nostalgiograph that Benjamin produced in his Berlin Childhood Circa 1900 (and shorter
examples of which Adorno, taking as his point of reference therefor his own
“Frankfurt Childhood Circa 1910,” incorporated into several of his large-form
works, notably Minima Moralia)—a
potentially invaluable text in its own right and own way but one that would
have been powerless to register the transformation qua transformation of the quotidian
life of society at large, ineluctably mediated as it would have been by the
subjectivity of a child with all its caprices and limitations. The films A Christmas Story and Radio Days, in each being formally
governed by a first-person narrative voiceover and hence “arguably” as much literary
as cinematic in essence, convey something of the sort of counterfactual
nostalgiograph I have in mind with regard to this specific phenomenon, although
of course given that Jean Shepherd and Woody Allen were born even later than my
counterfactual Lambert or Adorno, they inevitably incorporate gestalts of
electronically mediated listening that would have been out of his historical
reach. My counterfactual Lambert or Adorno would have been unable to imagine
the characters of radio dramas coming to life à la Shepherd and Allen (if in
such a setting as this one really is supposed to pretend that “Allen” is Mr.
Konigsberg’s surname [for of course on account of all the you- know-whats of
the past third of a century no member of the general public any longer feels
comfortable referring to him chummily as “Woody”]) because there were yet no
radio dramas at the dawn of radio, but he might have imagined that Christopher
Stone, the first radio DJ, about whom Lambert writes in a tone of extremely
grown-up dyspepsia in Music Ho!, was
his father’s best friend or his mother’s paramour; and he might have imagined
much the same sort of thing about the early singing stars of radio and
electronically recorded 78s—Rudy Vallée et al. Anyhow, regarding the
transformation of the phenomenology of listening through electrification: as
near as I can recall, Adorno’s account
of this transformation is entirely subsumable under two concepts—the atomization of listening, i.e., the
habituation to hearing and attending to music only in small chunks occasioned
by the breaking of even the longest of works into segments lasting less than
ten minutes each; and the homogenization
of sonority or perhaps, rather, the synthetization
of sonority, i.e., the tendency of the timbres of instruments to blend into
each other—for example in the non-solo-spotlighting stretches of a jazz
arrangement, during which one will hear the trombones, trumpets, saxophones,
and clarinets in the aggregate as “the horn section” and hence, effectively, as
a single instrument. Of course, a reader who is both gimlet-eyed and reasonably
knowledgeable about the history of mechanical music reproduction will be keen to
point out that both of these concepts
were already in play during the microepoch of the acoustically recorded
gramophone record—and such a reader would be right to point this out. For after
all, the records of the acoustic micro-epoch were no wider than those of the
early electric era ([sic], incidentally, on the leapfrogging over “epoch” to
“era,” for we are after all still in the period of electrically mediated music
reproduction {electronics being after all but a miniaturized electrics}, such
that it has been at least a quarter-century since that period surpassed in
length the locus classicus of an historical period long enough to be regarded as
an era—viz., the Victorian one); nor did they ever spin an RPM-let more slowly
unless one forgot to wind them up (and presumably, although I don’t know enough
about the inner workings of acoustic Victrolas to confirm this, a record was as
likely to play faster than the prescribed 78RPM through over-winding as slower
through under-winding). And of course because acoustic recording is
intrinsically “lower-fo” than electric recording, the sonorities of the
instruments were perforce even more inclined to blend together on records of
the acoustic micro-epoch than on these records’ early electric era
counterparts-cum-descendants. All the same, I submit (and I am as sure as one
can be about such non-fact-checkable statelets of affairs that Adorno would
have concurred with my submission) that these phenomena were more prevalent in
the early electric era than in the acoustic micro-epoch owing to two efficient
causes—1) the abovementioned supervention of radio broadcasting, a medium that
imposed rather than merely encouraged atomized listening by interspersing
blocks of music with spoken announcements of various sorts and that, what with
there being only so many hours in a day then as before and since, perforce
displaced a goodly portion of the listening-hours formerly devoted to the
unmediated audition of records. 2) The supervention of electric amplification,
which perforce increased the volume of the reproduced sound by gosh-only-knows
how many decibels and thereby perforce drew the listener’s attention gosh-only-knows
how much more closely to the sonorities contained therein. Of course, though,
the gimlet-eyed and reasonably knowledgeable reader may well be inclined to
contest the validity of at least the first of my three “perforces” by asserting
that however popular radio proved to be, there was presumably nothing stopping
the listener of the early radio era (which of course I am describing as an era
because like electrical mediation, radio is still very much with us, however
marginal proper old-school radio stations may have become to today’s
phenomenology of listening) from continuing to get all his mechanically reproduced
music directly from records and that even if his first-generation electrically
amplified Victrola permitted him to play his discs at a wall-and-floor shaking Level-11
volume, he was presumably free to play them at a Level-1 volume that afforded
him seamless continuity with the mercifully low decibelage consistently
produced by his last-generation acoustic Victrola. But this demurral fails to
take into account an aspect of electrically mediated mechanical era that was if
not altogether absent from the acoustically mediated mechanical microepoch then
at least much more subdued therein—namely, its frequent if intermittent non-electiveness owing to the obtrusion
of electrically amplified loudspeakers into public spaces, and it is in the
showcasing of this aspect that Lambert really shines, and shines, at least in
my reading experience, both unprecedentedly and unsucceededly, for Adorno in
his essays and studies on radio simply treats the non-electiveness as a fait accompli. Lambert, by vivid
contrast, shows us what it was like to be “present at the creation” of the
musical noise-pollution industry as an intelligent listener accustomed to
hearing music only where and when he chose, and he reveals it to have been
quite a disconcerting and irritating experience:
What people do in their own
homes is fortunately still their own concern, but what takes place in public
streets and public houses concerns us all. The loud speaker is little short of
a public menace.
In the neighbourhood where I
live, for example, there is a loud speaker every hundred yards or so, and it is
only rarely that they are tuned in to different stations. If they are playing
the foxtrot I most detest at one corner of the street, I need not think that I
can avoid it by walking to the other end. At times there is a certain piquancy
in following a tune in two dimensions at once, so to speak—to buy one’s
cigarettes to the first subject of a symphony, to get scraps of the development
as one goes to the newsagent, and to return home to the recapitulation—but the
idea of the town as one vast analytical programme, with every pavingstone a
barline, soon palls. It would not matter so much were the music bad music but,
as the B.B.C. can boast with some satisfaction, most of it is good. We board
buses to the strains of Beethoven and drink our beer to the accompaniment of
Bach. And yet we pride ourselves on the popular appreciations of these masters.
The concluding three sentences of this passage with their
allusion to two of the three B’s naturally recall Adorno’s numerous polemics
against the degradation of great music through overexposure on radio and
television. But on this matter, too, Lambert affords insight not found in
Adorno and presumably unavailable to him—insight that had he been compelled to
take it to heart would have at minimum compelled him to be more resourceful in
countering the ever-repeated charge that he was an “elitist” in the politically
problematic sense. For Adorno’s experience of such overexposure took place in the
listening environment provided by American commercial radio of the 1940s and
West- German state radio and television of the 1950s and 1960s, an environment
wherein the overexposure proceeded in lockstep with what one might term a
curatorship of stultification, a system of music programming in which traditional
crowd-pleasers were given pride of place in broadcast schedules and even
lesser-known works by the most famous composers were rarely heard. (Somewhere
or other Adorno tenders a gripe to the effect that among American radio
listeners, Beethoven’s Fourth Symphony is regarded as an eldritch obscurity.) In
British radio at the moment of the writing of Music Ho!, musical-curatorship bore an entirely different stamp owing
to the near-total domination of the airwaves by the non-commercial
governmentally affiliated BBC, which did not scruple to impose on listeners the
music it thought they should be listening to, and as Lambert reveals, that
music was more than occasionally quite advanced and difficult:
One might have thought that the
sturdy British working man entering a public house and being greeted with a
talk on the Reclamation of the Zuyder Zee, or a string quartet by Alban Berg,
would have requested the proprietor, and not entirely without reason, to ‘put a
sock in it’; but actually he just sits solidly there, drinking his synthetic
bitter to sounds of synthetic sweetness, not caring whether the loud speaker is
tuned into a jazz band, a talk on wildflowers, a Schönberg opera or a reading
from ‘The Land’ by the authoress [i.e., Vita Sackville-West]. So long as
certain waves are set up in the ether to produce a certain reaction on his
tympanum he is content.
It was presumably such impositions of high culture on
plebian ears as are mentioned in this paragraph that C. S. Lewis had in mind
when he had Bill “the Blizzard” Hingest, his mouthpiece in That Hideous Strength, dismiss as “balderdash” the desire of
academic sociologists to “make the lower orders govern the country and listen
to classical music.” To the end of his days, Adorno obdurately maintained that
the mass listeners were by no means organically incapable of listening
appropriately to serious music and that it was merely because they had never
been provided with anything than better jazz, pop, and light “classical”
favorites by the culture industry that they had come to prefer these inferior
alternatives, but Lambert’s observations on the radio-listening habitus of the
“sturdy English working man” seems at least tentatively to give the lie to
Adorno’s giving of the benefit of the doubt to that man and his American and
Continental-European fellows. To be sure, it is fair enough to point out that
the results of the SEWA’s exposure to Berg and Schoenberg could have been worse
from Adorno’s point of view, that the SEWA could have asked the pub-landlord to
“put a sock” in the loudspeaker on hearing the opening measures of the Lyric Suite or Erwartung instead of silently nursing his synthetic bitter
(whatever that is [I suspect Lambert is merely snootily abusing some perfectly
natural mass-produced lager like Watney’s Red Barrel {whose posters with their
slogans of “We want Watneys!” Adorno presumably saw during his very brief early-WWII
sojourn in England and definitely excoriated as a sort of allegory of the
culture industry’s manufactured fandom}) to them from their first measures to
their last. And to be sure, it is perhaps even fairer to point out that Lambert
only reports on the SEWA’s audition of these pieces from the outside,
presenting no other evidence of his indifference to their distinctness from
jazz-band tunes or the poetry of Vita Sackville-West than the “solidness” with
which he sits there on his barstool taking them in; that presumably he never
even thought to ask the SEWA what he
thought of them, and that for all he, Lambert, apparently actually knew, the
“solidness” was but a mask for the most rapt attention-cum-ardent appreciation
of them and “The Land” (and, complementarily, for the fiercest aversion to the
jazz-band tunes). And to be sure, it is perhaps fairest of all to point out
that Adorno himself, for all the firmness of his conviction that the common man
could be brought to love and understand even the most formidably complex
compositions of the Second Viennese School under the right circumstances
(however sketchily he may ever have gotten round to adumbrating those
circumstances), thought it “schoolmasterly presumption” to “force culture down
the throats of an unwilling population,” such that is seems at least not
improbable that had he spent as much time studying British curatorship of music
as its American counterpart he would have been as dissatisfied with the former
as with the latter; a supposition that finds reinforcement in Lambert’s brief
stricture on the decidedly schoolmasterly Christopher Stone, the early-1930s BBC’s
sole disk jockey (and, indeed, the UK’s first DJ ever, according to the online
reference work of first resort):
To take the example of Mr.
Christopher Stone whose well-modulated voice has doubtless given pleasure to
millions. At certain hours of the day, it is impossible for anyone to escape
from his breezy diffidence. That he is a benevolent autocrat I am sure is true,
just as I am sure that his choice of records is reasonably intelligent and
eclectic. But the fact remains that he enjoys a position of dictatorship as
fantastic as anything in Aldous Huxley’s Brave
New World.
Of course the aural image of an inescapable disembodied voice
associated with a specific person for all its disembodiedness and dictatorially
telling one what one must listen to wherever one goes is even more evocative of
Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four than of
Brave New World, but Lambert didn’t
have Nineteen Eighty-Four to cite in
Nineteen Thirty-Three because it hadn’t yet been written then; and indeed the
chronological priority of Music Ho!
to Orwell’s novel conjoined with Orwell’s own membership of the abovementioned
born-in-the-nineteen-oughties club suggests that his ubiquitous Big
Brother-broadcasting telescreens were but an audiovisual extrapolation from an
unpleasant personal phenomenology of radio listening exactly contemporaneous
and sympatric with Lambert’s. (In-further-deed, when I learn from the online
reference work of first resort that in the late thirties Stone expanded his
DJ-ing activities into child-orientated programming under the sobriquet “Uncle
Chris,” I cannot but wonder if Big Brother owed the faux-familial cast of his
name to Stone [even as I cannot but laugh at Stone-qua-“Uncle Chris”’s more
vivid anticipation of SCTV’s Floyd Robertson-qua- “Count Floyd”].) Lambert’s
remaining animadversions on atomized listening are also very just, but they do
not merit singling out and excerpting at length like the above ones because
they are centered on the phenomenon of private listening via the gramophone
record and therefore do not essentially say anything that has not since been
said about such listening via that medium and its technologically enhanced successors.
His argument in these passages boils down to an assertion that the abundance
and heterogeneity of music available on records tends to lead home listeners
either to binge (as we would say nowadays) on the music of a particular
composer or genre or to mix and match music of many genres and composers, and
that both of these tendencies are deleterious to the bestowal of an adequate
degree of attention to specific works. And he was of course quite right about
this, but, as my above observation of the continuity of format between
electrically and acoustically enregistered records makes plain, he would
doubtless have been just as right—or nearly just as right (for the sheer
quantity of available repertoire had doubtless increased several-fold in the
intervening thirty years)--had he directed the same shafts of at the home-audition
of records at the turn of the century, and he would certainly have been even
more right had he lived to direct them at the I-Tunes or YouTube playlist. It
would appear that private overlistening is a disease permanently endemic to the
era of portable mechanical musical media, and after nearly a century of the
macro-socially ineffectuality of eloquent warnings against it like Lambert’s,
one cannot but conclude that “therein the patient must minister to himself” (as
the present writer has sedulously attempted to do for at least forty years with
admittedly only modest and intermittent success). On the matter of the effect
of electronic amplification on sonority,
though, Music Ho! includes a passage
eminently worthy of insertion and exegesis herein:
I have heard a woman of some
intelligence and musical training actually state that she preferred the magic
tone of the oboe over the wireless to the actual sound of it in the concert
hall; and I have heard a painter, who prides himself on his modernity, state
that the two dimensional effect of broadcast music was to be preferred because
the sound instead escaping round the hall came straight at you and had ‘a frame
round it.’
First if least one must remark that this passage
particularly eloquently underscores the difference in sonority both between the
earliest electrically amplified music and the acoustically amplified music of
early gramophones and between the earliest amplified music and electrified
amplified music since about the late 1950s. The woman of some intelligence and
musical training does not say she prefers the “sound of the woodwinds” or even
“the sound of the double reeds” as heard over the radio; she says that she
prefers the sound specifically of the oboe heard thereover, so one observes
here that advent of electric recording-cum-transmission has coincided with the
arrival of a new capacity for spotlighting individual instruments. At the same
time she (or Lambert) thinks of the radio-transmitted tone as “magic” and hence
palpably distinct from the sound of an “actual” oboe. While it is easy enough
to imagine a listener of the late 1950s or later saying he prefers hearing the
oboe over the radio to hearing it in the concert hall, it is rather difficult
to imagine such a listener ascribing that preference to a difference in the
tone of the instrument itself rather than to some more
peripheral-cum-intangible quality like the ambient acoustics implied by the
transmitted performance, for by the late 1950s the world had fully entered the hi-fi-stroke-stereo
era wherein (barring the conspicuous supervention of flaws in the transmitting
medium like radio static or scratches on a record) recorded sounds were
generally effectively aurally indistinguishable from their real-world sources
and counterparts. And by the late 1950s broadcast music had by and large ceased
to be “two-dimensional” and to come “straight at” listeners with “a frame
around it” because it had begun to come at them with two frames around it—i.e., the frames provided by the paired
speakers of high-fidelity stereo in place of the single frame provided by
pre-stereo home listening equipment—and concomitantly acquired a third
dimension. But this passage is principally interesting on account of what one
might term the perverse dialecticalism (or dialectality) of the two preferences
described in it—a dialecticalism or dialecticality of a sort particularly
keenly relished by Adorno. In this respect the passage recalls Adorno’s account
of Alban Berg’s defense of shaving to him on the grounds that while women
appreciated hair on a man’s face as an attribute of masculinity, they actually
preferred the touch of a clean-shaven face to a bearded one because it allowed
them to feel the beard sprouting underneath the skin. But the two preferences
also at bear at least superficial comparison to certain well-known
counterintuitive but eminently defensible attitudes to mechanically reproduced
music—for example to Glenn Gould’s argument that however heavily edited, a
studio recording of a given work can present a more authentic and comprehensive
aural view of the work than even the best concert performance because it allows
the performer to correct all his mistakes; or Adorno’s that older operas are
better heard over the gramophone than seen in the opera house because any stage
production is bound to foreground the preposterousness of their scenarios in
relation to the historical moment of the listener. And so one cannot help
asking oneself if Lambert’s derision of the two preferrers is entirely merited.
I must admit that the painter’s preference at least receives a half-echo from
my bosom, for there are times when I am listening to a really excellent
monophonic recording and find myself grateful that the music is all in one
frame and coming directly at me and reflect that a stereophonic alternative
would only deleteriously scatter it about the room. But the key phrase in the
immediately preceding sentence is “really excellent,” for owing to the concurrent
shift from shellac discs to magnetic tape as the recording medium at the
source, the sound-engineer’s control booth at the studio or concert hall,
really excellent monophonic recordings—recordings in which the fidelity of
sound-reproduction seriously rivals that of later stereo counterparts—only
began to be produced at the dawn of the LP epoch (which I do not hesitate to
term an epoch rather than an era inasmuch as it lasted at most a mere four
decades [for the current vinyl revival in classical music listening is but a
picayune offshoot of the uninterrupted fetishization of the medium by fans of
“underground” and “indie” pop music]), a dawn that still lay two decades in the
future at the moment of Music Ho!’s
penning. When listening to even one of the most illustrious recordings of the
78 epoch (say, one of Artur Schnabel’s renditions of the Beethoven piano sonatas)
I invariably strain to give pride of place to the music rather than to the
invariably tinny and unresonant recording medium, and I find the sonorities of
the instruments communicated thereby about as “magic” as that of the human
voice as heard via an old-school answering-machine microcassette (a sonority
that I concede may sound “magic” indeed to certain younkers [doubtless the very
same younkers whose consumer dollars are fueling the abovementioned picayune classical
vinyl revival] who grew up with digital voicemail). But perhaps “that’s just
me”—not me qua timeless individual listener with his own idiosyncratic
listening preferences, to be sure, but me qua everylistener of the post-78 era,
or, rather everylistener thereof too spießbürgerlich
to bracket his aversion to the limitations of the medium, for at least if one
accepts a certain notion of the quiddity of music that has been espoused by
certain highly respectable thinkers-cum-writers on the subject (e.g., the
abovementioned Mr. Gould)—viz., that a musical composition is essentially
reducible to the “structures” delineated or embodied by it—one must be prepared
to acknowledge that the transition from the “mid-fidelity” sound-reproduction
of the 78 epoch to the hi-fidelity sound-reproduction of the LP epoch made
music only marginally (if at all) more present to the ears and minds of
listeners. For example, I do not find it a jot more difficult to identify the
start of the recapitulation of a Beethoven sonata movement as played by
Schnabel than I do the parallel moment in the same sonata as played on a
state-of-the-digital art recording by a twentieth-first century Beethoven
master like Paul Lewis. And despite the famous “X-ray like” sonic image
afforded by Glenn Gould’s stereo-era recordings of Bach, I do not find it a jot
easier to hear the entrances of the voices of Bach’s fugues as played by him
than as played by Schnabel’s contemporary Edwin Fischer (indeed, I tend to find
it slightly easier to hear Fischer’s entrances on account of his old-school
predilection for playing them more loudly than the already-active voices). To
be sure, when listening to pre-hi-fi recordings of orchestral works I sometimes
have trouble discerning individual score-parts, particularly in the highest
registers. But it might be plausibly argued that such detail is peripheral or
even extrinsic to the abovementioned structures, and it is incontestably known
that certain composers for the orchestra (notably Richard Strauss, as Charles
Rosen points out in his monograph on Arnold Schoenberg) have gone out of their
way to write orchestral parts that are not meant to be heard note-for-note,
parts vis-à-vis which pellucidity of sonic reproduction is a feature rather
than a bug, as one says nowadays. In short, although one would really need a
ca. 1960-dated postscript to Music Ho!
penned by a Lambert who had lived till then to be quite sure of this, it would
appear that Lambert’s bemusement by-cum-contempt for the painter and the woman
of some intelligence was founded in a notion of music as something not
essentially reducible to the abovementioned “structures.” It would therefore
further appear that answering the question whether his derision of these people
was justified will depend on answering the question whether the notion that
music is essentially reducible to those structures is a true and accurate one.
Before reading Music Ho! I was more
or less sure that the answer to that second question was a firm Yes, and now I
am at most or best half sure that it is. And to state this is obviously to
imply that at some point or set of points in Music Ho! Lambert makes a
case for a notion of music as something not essentially reducible to the
abovementioned structures and that this case is at least partly convincing (at
least to me). Such being the meta-case, it would seem that for the sake of
addressing the master-question in point, the question of the justifiedness or
unjustifiedness of the derision, my very next discursive step should be to
summarize the just-mentioned case in as many words as are required for its
succinct summarization. “But,” the attentive reader is bound now to query,
“given that you have already resolved to make your discourse center on the
disentangling of Lambert’s line of thought from Adorno’s, will not the taking
of this next step perforce constitute a forswearing of your resolution and an at-minimum-middlingly-massive
digression from your discursive center?” And to this query I am happily reply,
“By no means, for while Adorno seems never to have maintained that music was reducible to the abovementioned
structures, he seems always to have presupposed that such structures merited
pride of place in any discussion or audition of a work of music and that all
other elements of a work were of subordinate importance to them and significant
only to the extent that they served to accentuate those structures or disguise
their defectiveness.” So, for example
(an example that helpfully will allow me to do some backfilling on Adorno’s
conjectural attitude to the passage from Lambert about the magic oboe sound and
the aural picture frame) regarding the abovementioned tendency of the timbres
of instruments in a jazz arrangement to blend into each other, he effectively held
that the blending arose out of and abetted the absence of coherent voice-leading in jazz, out of its lack
of regard to the interrelations of chords qua bearers of mutually
distinguishable “horizontal” successions of notes—in other words, the basic
“horizontal” structural units that allow one to distinguish a main melody from
its accompaniment in a prevailingly homophonic passage or a melody from its
peers in a prevailingly polyphonic one.
But onto the promised and long-deferred disentangling, a
task that is complicated by the fact that Adorno ascribes to both Hindemith and
Stravinsky a tendency that Lambert spotlights only in Hindemith, however snugly
it may complement (and in fact does complement) the shortcomings he detects in
Stravinsky. But for the sake of forestalling the generation of elf-locks in my
own argument I shall “bracket” or “stick a pin in” this partial mismatch and
concentrate for now on the tendency as exclusively Hindemithian. This tendency
may be described as “voluntary self-mechanization,” and in his 1941 essay “On
Popular Music” Adorno succinctly (albeit not so succinctly as to dissuade me
from omitting some sentences from my transcription of the pertinent passage) describes
the tendency itself and its psychological motivations:
[Stravinsky and Hindemith]
aimed at musical adaptation to reality—a reality understood by them in terms of
the “machine age.” The renunciation of dreaming by these composers is an index
that listeners are ready to replace dreaming by these composers is an index
that listeners are ready to replace dreaming by adjustment to raw reality, that
they reap new pleasure from their acceptance of the unpleasant. […] They take
what is called a realistic attitude and attempt to harvest consolation by
identifying themselves with the external social forces which they think
constitutes the “machine age.” [….T]he machine is an end in itself only under
given social conditions—where men are appendages of the machines on which they
work. The adaptation to machine music necessarily implies a renunciation of
one’s own human feelings and at the same time a fetishism of the machine such
that its instrumental character becomes obscured thereby.
The phrase “men” as “appendages of the machines on which
they work” naturally conjures two “iconic” images of the silent cinema—that of
young Fredersen crucified to the giant clock-like gizmo in Metropolis and that of Charlie Chaplin caught in the cogs of the
assembly lines in Modern Times
(which, yes, I know, has a soundtrack and is therefore technically not a silent
film) and was doubtless partly inspired by both of them. It suggests that
Adorno conceives of the typical early-mid-twentieth-century individual as more
than figuratively a factory worker and of Hindemith as at least subjectively
identifying with or directly pandering to such a person. Lambert’s “take” on
the phenomenon is—dare I even commit the blasphemy to virtual paper?—more
dialectical than Adorno’s. In the first place, as he points out in completely
separate section of the book from the one on Hindemith, a section on
contemporary abuses of folk music, he does not conceive of the typical
individual of his time as a proletarian but as the “tired and harassed business
man wearing a characterless and standardized bowler [hat],” one of millions of
men dispersed among “twelve different European capitals” and “following
precisely the same drab occupations, supporting wives or mistresses wearing the
same cheap French models and using the same cheap French perfume, going to the
same Garbo film, listening to the same kind of motor car”—a decidedly bourgeois
type despite his consumption of standardized assembly-line-produced products
and despite resembling such products to a model-T turn in his international
interchangeability with his fellows. At the same time, he avows that
Hindemith’s music is intrinsically and consistently mechanical:
“Lytton Strachey writing of
Macaulay says that his style ‘with its metallic exactness and its fatal
efficiency was certainly one of the most remarkable products of the Industrial
Revolution.’ Hindemith bears much the same relation to the German classics as
Macaulay did to the English classics, and his style, with its deadness and
monotony of rhythm, its atonal jazzing up of Bach’s sewing-machine
counterpoint, is an equally typical product of the present Mechanical Age. It
has the hardness of outline and slightly hollow ring that Strachey finds in
Macaulay.
Of course Adorno would doubtless have shouted the German equivalent
of “Them’s fightin’ words” at the description of Bach’s counterpoint as
“sewing-machine”-like. But then of course Macaulay died more than thirty years
before Hindemith was born, such that we are obviously not dealing with
state-of-the-art twentieth-century machinery in either case. Perhaps the Bachian sewing machine is actually
to be understood here as a non-pejoratively as a comparatively wholesome piece
of early industrial technology. Admittedly, the online reference work of first
resort informs me that the first sewing machine was invented in 1755, five
years after J.S. Bach’s death, but presumably Lambert, like any other
self-respecting literate Anglo-Saxon of his day, had as his reference work of
first resort the work on which the online reference work of first resort would
later be superstructed—viz., eleventh edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica,
which, having not yet had any electronic superstructure imposed on it
presumably did not include an entry specifically on the sewing machine. (And
perhaps I shall someday even verify this, if I can ever be bothered to dig my
own eleventh edition of the EB out of
the half-dozen storage crates amongst which it is dispersed.) In any case
Lambert’s point here is that Hindemith’s self-mechanization is an instance of
“uneven development,” that through him music is only belatedly catching up with
a development that had long since taken place in the mainstream of literary
technique as represented by Macaulay’s prose (and that had indeed long since
been left behind by hip post-Victorian men of letters like Strachey), and this
is a point that gains pointiness when considered alongside a passage of a few
pages earlier on Hindemith’s more-literally machine-minded colleagues:
The present vogue for
mechanical realism, being based primarily on the picturesque aspects of
machinery, is bound to disappear as the mechanic more and more comes to
resemble the bank clerk, and as the Turneresque steam engine gives way to the
unphotogenic electric train. It is only comparatively primitive machinery that
affords a stimulus, and there is already a fain period touch about [Arthur
Honegger’s] Pacific 231 and [Sergei
Prokofiev’s] Le Pas d’Acier. One
feels that they should have been written when railways and factories really
were beginning to alter our lives; that Prokofieff should have written ballets
about the spinning jenny and the Luddite riots; that Honegger should have been
there to celebrate the opening of the Stockton and Darlington Railway and the
death of Huskisson with a ‘Symphonie Triomphale et Funèbre.’ Our latter-day
mechanical romanticists are indeed only filling in a corner which—save for a
few ludicrous exceptions like Marenco’s Excelsior
[Oh, that old thing! {I cannot but
wonder if these utterly mystifying references, which occur at a rate of several
per page in Music Ho! (witness the
one to Huskisson immediately above) more eloquently bespeak my ignorance of the
points de repère of the “culturally
literate” early-mid-twentieth century Anglo-Saxon or Lambert’s mastery of them;
or if indeed Lambert himself expected any of his contemporaries to recognize
even a substantial minority of his references and was not in fact lobbing most
of them at his imagined reader like so many “googlies bowled from the inside
skin of the popping crease,” as he doubtless would have described them.}]—was
left unexplored by the nineteenth-century aesthetic romanticists.
Hence, far from finding it almost futuristic in its sinister
dystopianism per Adorno, Lambert regards Hindemith’s self-mechanization as retardataire
to the point of corniness, and when he describes the scene conjured up by it,
the result is neither sinister à la Fritz Lang nor comically fantastic à la
Chaplin but simply ludicrously cartoonish (à la…Friz Freleng, perchance?):
Listening to his firmly wright
works we seem to see ourselves in a block of hygienic and efficient workman’s
flats built in the best modernismus manner, from which emerge troops of healthy
uniformed children on their way to the communal gymnasium. Hindemith’s
technique is indeed a gymnastic technique, and his attitude towards
‘expressive’ music is reminiscent of an instructor in physical jerks
pooh-poohing the poses and affectations of ballet—even though they may demand a
higher degree of training than he himself possesses.
Even so, on account of his knack for “discovering dialectics
for himself” (as Adorno characterized Berg’s above-cited apercu about shaving),
Lambert asserts that while Hindemith’s music may be worthless qua music it has
served an historically meritorious purpose:
One can, of course, entirely
sympathize with the spirit that has prompted this reaction. When we think of
the stranglehold German romanticism had on this country thirty years ago, we
can imagine what it must have been like in Germany itself. German romanticism
had come to resemble a stuffy and scented drawing-room, overdecorated with silk
flounces, and encumbered with vast padded sofas and downy cushions. Hindemith
and his followers have thrown open the double windows, torn down the hangings,
put sackcloth instead of brocade and replaced the upholstery with glass and
chromium plating.
Uncannily enough, Adorno tenders grudging praise along the
very same lines to Hindemith in a hatchet piece on him dating from 1932, the
year immediately preceding that of Music
Ho!’s publication:
Music-maker’s music has
restored one thing to compositional technique: its contact with the manner in
which instruments are played. They have loosened up the stereotypical
neo-German imagination that has only the finished sonority at its command and
has lost control of its production and therefore petrifies the sonority in all
its splendor, and they have managed to do this by doggedly listening to the
instruments, listening to what they might wish to be playing. Stravinsky’s
liberation of the percussion, Hindemith’s woodwind-and-brass campaigns, betoken
a genuine breakthrough, and it is no accident that it was precisely here that
the criticism leveled by the most recent music-maker’s music most emphatically
hit its mark; the “duet kitsch” from [Hindemith’s comic opera] News of the Day seals the fate of the
neo-German orchestra, and Stravinsky’s Fairy [i.e., his ballet Le baiser de la fée] phosphorescently
quotes the buried corpse.
“Music-maker’s music” is my rendition (for the original
passage is in German, and I am its Englisher) of “Musikantenmusik,” Hindemith’s
preferred term for the kind of music he was composing in the above-discussed
deliberately mechanistic pieces, and here as in “On Popular Music” Adorno lumps
it in with the music contemporaneously composed by Stravinsky. I shall gloss
this term at length presently—i.e., in the near present. In the immediate
present it is more exigent to point out that by “neo-German” (“neudeutsch” in
the original) imagination and Adorno means the imagination and orchestra of the
late German romanticism” of “thirty years ago” referenced and pilloried by
Lambert. And so like Lambert, Adorno believes that for his fundamentally fatal
flaws, Hindemith performed salutary work in replacing a certain unsatisfactory quality
of late German romanticism with something superior to it. And although Adorno
addresses himself to a specific technical facet of
composition—instrumentation—and Lambert does not, they would both seem to be
objecting to a single effect produced by the late-German-romantic orchestra and
single alternative effect produced by Hindemith’s orchestra, for “a sonority”
that is “finished” and “petrified in its splendor” in virtue of the composer’s
“loss of control of its production” does indeed evoke a sonic environment for
which “stuffy and scented drawing room” is a most apt metaphor. According to
Adorno, the late-romantic German composers had gotten used to thinking in terms
of certain “splendid” but anciently-preset and therefore “petrified”
combinations of instruments instead of thinking in terms of the as-yet-untried
capabilities and dispositions of individual instruments—a habit palpably
analogous to that of an interior-designer of 1903 who stuffs a drawing room with
the usual late-Victorian-cum-early Wilhelmine “silk flounces” and “vast padded
sofas and downy cushions” instead of considering which pieces of furniture and
décor are individually and collectively best suited to the room qua
gathering-place of the inhabitants of the century of the newly invented
aeroplane, wireless, and motion-picture film. (Of course, this concluding
catalogue of inventions is my own interpolation, but here I am “arguably” but paying
condign equivocal homage to Lambert, whose own figurative universe is rather
conceptually cluttered in obliging us to think of Hindemith as a belated
Victorian on one level and as a cutting-edge Bauhausian on another.) And of
course Adorno’s assertion that Hindemith (with Stravinsky’s help) “sealed the
fate” of the neo-German orchestra and turned it into “a buried corpse” is but a
more lurid way of saying as Lambert does that Hindemith cleared all the old
nineteenth-century furniture and décor out of the drawing room—even if Adorno
doesn’t seem to envisage the new F&D along quite the same lines as Lambert does, for “quotation” suggests a
pastiche of the neo-German sonority rather than the production of an entirely
new one, although by the same token I suppose the “phosphorescence” could as readily
be traced to state-of-the-art chromium-plated lighting fixtures as to a
churchyard glowworm. To return to Musikantenmusik:
it rewards glossing chiefly because the gloss opens onto yet another
significant affinity between Adorno and Lambert. The word is obviously analyzable into Musikanten and musik, and as I have already written that Hindemith termed his own Musikantenmusik it may seem to follow
inexorably either that Hindemith himself was a Musikant or that he was writing music for Musikanten to perform, but neither such conclusion follows
inexorable because the relationship between a Musikant and music is by no means clear-cut or straightforward. Not
that the definition of Musikant is by
any means murky or circuitous. To be sure, Musikant
is one of those Continental words that is often held to be untranslatable into
English, albeit not one of the milliard Continental words like Gemütlichkeit, ennui, and sprezzatura, that
are so often held because they supposedly denote some emotional state or
attitude that is too subtle and exquisite to be accessible to the ham-fistedly positivistic
Anglo-Saxon mind; but rather a less common such word, a word that is no less
insultingly held to be un-Englishable because it supposedly denotes an entity
or institution too geographically and historically organic to be assimilated to
the ham-fistedly pragmatic Anglo-Saxon mode of social organization. But at
least as near as I can tell from what Adorno writes about the Musikant elsewhere in the essay on
Hindemith now in point, it is eminently easy to define Musikant in terms that are eminently transposable into a British or
American social-cum-historical context. A Musikant
would simply seem to be a musician who lacks accreditation by or affiliation
with an official musical institution like a conservatory or municipal orchestra
and therefore cannot rightly termed a professional but who makes a living
through his music-making and therefore cannot rightly be termed an amateur. The
archetype of the Musikant in the
Anglosphere would seem to be the nineteenth-century small-town fiddler who
supplied the tunes at local dances like the one depicted in Charles Ives’s
“Washington’s Birthday,” and Adorno’s job-description of the Musikant is certainly evocative of such
a figure:
The Musikant who wandered about the world once upon a time presented
himself immediately to the people who listened to him: he would “strike up a
tune” for them, and what he then began playing had use-value, whether it served
as an accompaniment to dancing or strove to cheer people up; what he supplied
was tied to the immediate exigencies of the use to which it was being put; it
had not yet taken on the consistency of a specific form; it was inalienable
from the moment in which its notes rang out; if it was based on specific
melodies, these were dealt with at the Musikant’s
discretion through the liberty of improvisation; his improvisatory skill in
wielding his instrument mattered more than the question of the shape of what he
was offering, because musical performance did not yet exist as a practice with
an objective shape.
Hindemith, being an academically trained composer offering
nothing but music for objectively shaped performances, obviously could not have
conceived of himself as a Musikant in
such strictly defined terms. But he did seem to think he was capable of
re-embodying the Musikant at least to
the extent of providing music that served people’s immediate needs and uses—albeit
providing it only mediately by writing musical compositions to be played by
other would-be latter-day Musikanten.
In his pursuit of this goal, however, he was destined to be thwarted, for
There are no Musikanten today…[M]usicians have become
fundamentally sedentary, and they remain so even when they are roaming through
holiday-camp forests with ornamented lutes in their hands during the summer-vacation
season. In actual fact Jonny [the hero of Jonny
spielt auf, {Jonny strikes up} Ernst Krenek’s opera about a jazz violinist]
does not strike up any tunes; [Paul] Whiteman gives concerts, and people dance
to his concertizing; music has use value only when it is meant to serve to
teach other people how to make music, in educational settings; the music that
eventually arises from its being put to this use has no use value of its own
and therefore even calls the pedagogical value of the educative music into
question…
In short, to employ a quasi-metaphor that Adorno would
doubtless have found too “on the nose” for comfort, Hindemith was affecting to
provide a good or service that could no longer be produced and for which there
were no longer any customers in any case.
On this point Lambert is in complete agreement with Adorno:
Hindemith calls himself a
craftsman, never a tone poet, and has said that ‘a composer should never write
unless he is acquainted with the demand for his work. The times of consistent
composing for one’s own satisfaction are probably gone for ever.’ [But he ] is
mistaken when he imagines that the writing of music is governed by the laws of
supply and demand. There is no regular demand for musical material as there is
for writing material or boxes of matches.
But in immediately going on to propose a positive
alternative to Hindemith’s compositional practice he tenders some assertions
that at least superficially seem tailor-(or shoemaker) made to elicit
spluttering demurrals from Uncle Teddie:
There is only a demand for
something that creates its own demand—a good piece of music in fact. By all
means let us have as many new piano concertos as possible, provided they are
equal to, or superior to, those in the standard of repertory. There is no
specific demand, however, for a new concerto as such, irrespective of quality.
A pianist does not ask for a new piano concerto as he does for a new pair of
shoes, giving the old one away to an amateur. Concertos may wear thin in the
course of time, but handsewn leather is better than mass-produced cardboard.
To this Adorno would probably first demur that in the 1930s
the very idea of a “good” piece of music has been rendered problematic by the
subordination of aesthetic criteria to certain historical forces, and he might
very well point to his own example of “music that arises…in educational
settings” as a case in point of this unfortunate subordination. He might assert
that nowadays people are taught to write music that imitates certain
pedagogical models and then go on to compose music that continues to imitate
those models and is held to be good because of its adherence to those models, whereas
its adherence thereto is in fact proof of its badness in addition to its
uselessness. After all, he did not even think that very many of the dozens of
people who had had the best living music teacher in the world, Arnold
Schoenberg, had produced music of any substantial merit, writing as he did in
1930 that “the list of Schoenberg students worthy of serious attention as
composers” was “pretty much exhausted” by Berg and Webern, whom he dubbed “the
foremost of the very few,” plus Horwitz, Eisler, Zillig, and Skalkottas (and
given that Eisler is the only one of these last four to have retained even a
ghost of a reputation in the early twentieth-first century, one cannot help
being inclined to suppose that Adorno’s appraisal of them was if anything too
generous [although of course I remain open to being persuaded that each and
every one of them has been criminally neglected by posterity]). But in point of
fact Lambert’s notion of aesthetic goodness is thoroughly historically
grounded, and we have indeed already seen an instance of this groundedness in
his dismissal of Hindemith’s motorism as belated Macaulayism. And yet it is
still easy to imagine Adorno’s objecting that this instance is insufficiently
historically grounded in reposing solely on an unsubstantiated analogy with a
non-musical phenomenon (even if Adorno himself did not shrink from drawing equally
fast-and-loose analogies, as may be seen in his remark in his monograph on
Wagner that Wotan’s vaunting of his spear’s indestructability by fire
anticipated the advertising copy of twentieth-century manufacturers of
flame-resistant kitchenware). Fortunately Lambert does show himself capable of
substantiating his aesthetic judgments with illustrations drawn from the
history of music proper, as is shown by his appraisal of Stravinsky’s
neoclassical compositions, the ones exactly contemporaneous with Hindemith’s
motoric Musikantenmusik. Of
Stravinsky’s Piano Concerto in particular he writes:
The repetition of the [opening]
theme, by the orchestra, adds even less to the very insignificant content of
the opening phrase which, like Stravinsky’s earlier themes, is restricted to a
small interval centred round the one note. The second subject strikes a more
convincing atmosphere at the outset because, consisting of a little minor
phrase repeated three times over a double ostinato, it takes us back to the
peasant mentality of the old Stravinsky. But here again the phrase is
illogically extended by eighteenth-century passage work, whose origin is not
thematic, but harmonic. That is to say in a quick eighteenth-century movement
for a keyboard instrument the harmonies are often split up into toccata-like
figures thus produced having no significant content as pure melody. Their
raison d’être is the harmony that lies beneath them, and to use them as
Stravinsky does as melodic material over a totally different base is a complete
misunderstanding of their value and function, and a convincing proof, if any
such is needed, of the artificial and synthetic quality of his alleged
classicism.
And here we are at last arrived at the moment for pointing
out the convergence of Adorno’s and Lambert’s respective attitudes to
Stravinsky, for in the Hindemith-bashing screed that I have already cited,
Adorno tenders an argument against Igor Fyodorovich’s (and his lesser contemporary epigones’) “alleged”
classicism that is at least in none-too-broad outline indistinguishable from
Lambert’s:
From the point of view of
compositional technique, neoclassicism is nothing but the attempt to resolve
these difficulties [i.e., the difficulties motoric Musikanten have employing time as anything other than an “idling of
the technical-compositional understanding” in the light of the “cessation of
that dialectically contrastive possibility of composition that could master
time”] through recourse to the old models in which that break between the
particular and the whole that torments the Musikanten
(or the more knowing among them) does not yet hold sway. It is an attempt that
is doomed to fail. For within the framework of tonality models of uniform
rhythmic simplicity still have power as elementary phenomena, whereas in the
new Musikantentmusik they seem
primitive and banal because they can no longer be understood as primal
phenomena in a prescribed musical space; rather, they are extremely ill-suited
to harmonic and intervallic material that places itself at a great distance
from the simple interrelations of overtones. It is therefore only logical if
Stravinsky eschews this material and finds his footing in stylistic copies that
separate themselves from the old models in their dissonant caprice and literary
demonism but not in their musical shape itself.
Both Lambert and Adorno vehemently maintain that Stravinsky errs
in drawing on ready-made eighteenth century-style rhythmic-cum-melodic patterns
because harmonically speaking fings ain’t what they used to be in the
eighteenth century; or, to fill out the conjoined argument ever so slightly yet
not a jot licentiously: ready-made rhythmic-cum-melodic templates were fine and
to a certain necessary from Bach’s to Haydn’s collection of days because back
then working out the basic chord progressions and their interrelations was
itself a job of work for the listener (this is what Adorno is getting at in
describing the old templates as “primal”: in the eighteenth century the entire
“framework of tonality” was still new to composers and listeners alike), such
that repeated arpeggiated triads and the like helped the listener perceive chordal
interrelations that he might otherwise have failed to grasp, but now that chord
progressions of the eighteenth-century type are no longer in use, the arpeggiated
triads and the like no longer underscore anything and so therefore no longer
serve any function for the listener. And yet one can detect a certain tension between
the two arguments at the level of what one might somewhat preciously term their
“inner voices.” In the first place, Adorno makes it plain that he regards
“tonality” in its entirety as a superseded harmonic system, whereas Lambert
implies nothing about the current state of harmony eo ipso or its implications
for the writing of melodies. He seems to
leave open to Stravinsky the possibility of writing melodies that are conceived
in simply a-harmonic terms or that serve a function that is partially
harmonic—and partially harmonic in relation to some still extant and vital
version of tonality. Adorno, by contrast, maintains that the death of tonality
has induced a fundamental change in the “material” available to composers—the
material out of which they must construct both their chords and their melodies.
As this material “places itself at a great distance from the simple
interrelations of overtones”—i.e., apparently, the interrelations on which the
chords of tonal harmony are based, the interrelations between the overtones
produced by octaves, thirds, and fifths—Adorno presumably would only be
satisfied with melodies that not only avoided motoric repetitions but that
avoided the repetition of any of the traditional tonal intervals—melodies
prevailingly centered on wide leaps delineating intervals other than octaves,
thirds, and fifths. But Adorno’s and Lambert’s divergences in meta-musical
outlook do not simply boil down to contingently different opinions on the
question of whether, in Arnold Schoenberg’s words (or at least words repeatedly
attributed to Arnold Schoenberg, for I have yet to trace them to a credible
source), “There is still much great music to be composed in C major”; rather, they
spring from radically divergent understandings of the history of music and
indeed radically divergent notions of music’s most essential aims and elements,
of what music is all about. These divergences coalesce
around their respective attitudes to Jean Sibelius, a composer about whom they
disagree at least as stridently as they concur regarding Hindemith and Stravinsky.
In Adorno’s view, tendered in a 1940 collection of “strictures” on JS that
makes his hatchet-job on Hindemith look like a lifetime- achievement
Oscar-bestower’s speech, “if Sibelius is good, then the perennial criteria of
musical quality from Bach to Schoenberg—the criteria of evocativeness, of
articulateness, of oneness in multifariousness, of diversity in unity—are now
obsolete.” Lambert in stark contrast regards Sibelius as the only prominent
living composer whose work is pointing the way ahead for his younger and future
colleagues, as can be seen in his titling of his long section on the composer,
the concluding section of his entire book, “Sibelius and the Music of the
Future.” “Hang about,” the reader may
here be tempted to interject: “didn’t Adorno himself effectively assert that
German music had become obsolete by his own day when he asserted that Hindemith
& co. had at least ‘restored’ a kind of instrumentation that German composers
had lost their command of? To which interjection I would rejoin: “No, because
Adorno asserted that Hindemith & co. had restored a kind of instrumentation
that had been lost command of by neo-German
composers.” The reader may certainly be forgiven for thinking this correction
as point-missing as that of the accountant who on finding John Cleese bemused by
his relishing of the Pythons’ satiric jabs at accountants sought to dispel the
bemusement by revealing that he was a chartered
accountant. But the truth is that Adorno effectively regarded the neo-German
composers—composers of blurrily lush orchestral music like Richard Strauss and
Hans Pfitzner—as non-German
composers, or at any rate as semi-apostates from the central German tradition
qua standard-bearer of “the perennial criteria of musical quality,” criteria
that he regarded as being exemplarily maintained by Schoenberg, and before him
by the neo-Germans’ exact contemporary, Gustav Mahler. Of course, Lambert in his passage in grudging praise of
Hindemith engaged in no “neo”-bandying; he decried the “stuffiness” of fin de
siècle Germany and fin de siècle German music tout court. In Lambert’s view, by the end of the nineteenth century
all German composers (including the pre-atonal Schoenberg, whose first
masterpiece, Verklärte Nacht, he
dismisses as “stodgy” and “academic”) had “lost the plot” of history, a plot
whose chief developments over the course of the nineteenth century had been (in
his view) the rise of democracy and nationalism, a rise best attested to and
embodied (in his view) in the work of the Russian Mikhail Glinka and his avowed
successors, the five composers known in Russian as the “Kuchka” and in English
as “The Mighty Handful” or, more prosaically if helpfully, as “The Five”—Mussorgsky,
Balakierev, Borodin, Rimsky-Korsakov, and Cui (but not at all embodied or
attested to in the work of the most famous Russian composer ever, Tchaikovsky,
for Lambert appears to have adhered to the then-received notion that
Tchaikovsky wasn’t a proper Russian composer but a sort of super-talented ape
of the Germans and the French). We have already seen this view of Lambert
encapsulated in the passage from Music
Ho! paraphrased by Weaver, a passage that rounds out a longer passage that
it would be apposite to quote in full here, thus:
The classical symphony has as
its spiritual background the aristocratic and international qualities of
eighteenth-century society. The romantic movement gives an individualist twist
and an added picturesqueness to the eighteenth-century symphony which alters
its technical form without seriously striking at its spiritual foundations.
Nationalism, however, destroys both the aristocratic quality of the
eighteenth-century abstract symphony and the individualist quality of the
nineteenth-century programme symphony.
The conflict is not only
technical and emotional, it is almost a class conflict, and it is hardly too
far fetched a play upon words to suggest that the phrase “first subject” is in
itself undemocratic. In Mussorgsky this conflict is openly avowed. Symphonic
development was repellent to him because it symbolized not only foreign
domination but aristocratic domination. In [Mussorgsky’s operas] Boris [Godunov] and Khovantchina we find the strongest expression in any
art form, up to the present day, of the conflict between aristocratic
internationalism and proletarian nationalism.
The phrase “first subject” is susceptible to a play on words
because “subject” denotes both a musical theme and the mere citizen of an
aristocratically structured polity ruled by a king and because “first subject”
denotes the first musical theme in a movement constructed in sonata form, the
form central to the classical symphony as developed and perfected by Mozart,
Haydn, and Beethoven, but the fetched-ness of the wordplay may have been
farther than Lambert supposed. For while it is undoubtedly true that the
symphony had as its material
background the aristocratic qualities of eighteenth-century society (I shall
“stick a pin” in the international qualities for now) inasmuch as the first
symphonies were written for orchestras maintained by noblemen like Haydn’s patron
Prince Esterhazy and the Compte d’Ogny, who commissioned Haydn’s “Paris”
symphonies, it is at least disputable whether the classical symphony was at any
point or to any extent aristocratic in its “spiritual” character, and indeed
Adorno held that it was innately democratic in character and tendency, at least
to the extent that we associate democracy with the rise of the individual at
the expense of the aristocratic order. Adorno’s extra-musical “subject” was the
individual conceived not as an obsequious courtier or flunky in the aristocratic
pecking order but as an autonomous experiencer-cum-agent intrinsically inimical
to that order, the individual as conceived by philosophical champions of the
French Revolution like Immanuel Kant. In Adorno’s view, the emergence of sonata
form was one of the great milestones of the debut of that subject in history writ
large because this form granted the composer an unprecedented degree of control
of musical material over larger expanses of time, in blocks of music that
comprised multiple movements. First (so Adorno) sonata form went through a
“petit-bourgeois” phase under Haydn’s superintendence, a phase characterized by
formal stasis the complete “fungibility” of the material—its amenability to
being placed in multiple intraformal settings with minimum alteration of its
basic contours; then, with the arrival of Beethoven, sonata form entered a kind
of grand-bourgeois or heroic-bourgeois phase (parenthetical disclaimer: here
the terminology is mine, not Adorno’s, as I cannot recollect his explicitly
contrasting Haydn’s strain of bourgeoisness with Beethoven’s), wherein the
composer could introduce distinctive and “infungible” material into a work without
sacrificing an iota of formal coherence. (Naturally this narrative grotesquely
exaggerates the contrast between Beethoven’s modus operandi and Haydn’s, and
one could plausibly enough argue that Haydn was a grander bourgeois than
Beethoven in that throughout his career he was working with sonata form itself
as his core material and material that far from being “infungible” exhibited
infinite plasticity in his hands. Still, I cannot in good faith upbraid Adorno
too harshly for his meta-petty pigeonholing of Haydn as an arch-pigeonholer
inasmuch as one can only fully appreciate the extent of Haydn’s inexorable innovativeness
by acquainting oneself with multi-decade stretches of his oeuvre, which really
only became practicable with the Antal Dorati’s conclusion of his complete
cycle of the symphonies in the early 1970s, in other words several years after
Adorno’s death. Of course Adorno presumably could
have acquainted himself with such stretches by perusing the scores of all the
Haydn symphonies, string quartets, piano trios, etc., as these scores were presumably
not difficult to obtain in either Frankfurt, New York, or Los Angeles [his
three main cities of residence]. But it would have been unreasonable to expect
him or indeed anyone but a dedicated Haydn scholar like Herr Hoboken or H. C.
Robbins Landon to undertake such an extensive ocular survey; there are “only so
many hours in the day” even for a fully professionally trained composer like
Adorno, a man fully conversant with the mysteries of musical notation. And by
the same token, given a complete set of recordings of the Haydn symphonies,
string quartets, piano trios, autc. even an amateurishly untrained listener
like the present writer, a man only very spottily acquainted with the aforesaid
mysteries, can acquire a more or less adequate sense of their formal and
contentual diversity as a corpus [which is by no means to be confused with an
adequate sense of their respective formal and contentual richesses] within the span of a year no matter how busy he is, by
simply regularly and recurrently employing a random selection from the as aural
wallpaper. And the same holds true, mutatis mutandis, for any other comparably
gargantuan collection of musical compositions organized according to any other principle.
This is “worth” both “pointing out” and “sticking a pin in” because pace both Adorno’s and Lambert’s
disparagement of “atomized listening,” the capacity of most serious music to
yield up even its most recondite treasures to such listening provided that the
atomization is offset by sheer doggedness of repetition naturally contains
implications for an appraisal of music’s essential versus accidental qualities,
implications whose explication must perforce be postponed to the moment when I
have fully explicated Lambert’s and Adorno’s respective appraisals of that
distinction.) Perhaps the principal attribute of the symphony and other
sonata-form movements that encouraged Adorno to regard them as innovatively
“bourgeois” was their harmonic dynamism by comparison with older multi-movement
forms like the early eighteenth-century suite, a dynamism that lent them a
distinctly dramatic character that bore fruitful comparison with
contemporaneous “bourgeois” stage dramas like the plays of Beaumarchais that
served as the bases of Mozart’s Marriage
of Figaro and Rossini’s Barber of
Seville. Unlike the suite, which remained anchored in the home key from
first movement to last, a symphony, string quartet, aut cet. could move far
afield from the home key both within movements and between them, but because
the harmonic system of the late eighteenth century was still centered on the
tonic-dominant polarity, in the hands of a skillful composer the divagations
from and returns to the home key could be concatenated in a way that always made
sense and yet never failed to surprise (yes, yes, yes: not unlike Figaro’s
discovery that he is Marcellina and Dr. Bartolo’s lovechild, or Figaro’s and
Count Almaviva’s discovery that they have been planning to commit adultery with
their own wives). Lambert was presumably
aware and even mindful of this dynamism, but at least in Music Ho! he takes no note of it or indeed of any aspect of the
harmonic register of sonata form. For Lambert, sonata form is signalized above
all and to its discredit by its repetitiveness
as embodied in its recapitulation section:
The element of formal balance
provided by the recapitulation that is an integral form is one of the greatest
stumbling blocks to a sensitive composer—for although he is dealing with time
in the abstract he has to express himself with time in the concrete. We know
from his letters that Mozart conceived his symphonies in a moment of time, that
is to say from his point of view the recapitulation did not necessarily come
after the development, but that does not alter the fact that the audience will
have to hear them in that order.
It is perhaps “worth remarking in passing” that Lambert like
Adorno seems to have a blind spot about Haydn that distorts his conception of
the history of sonata form, for a far larger proportion of Mozart’s sonata-form
movements than Haydn’s contain recapitulations that are near-note-for-note
repetitions of their expositions, and indeed Haydn rarely refrains from introducing
conspicuously new material into a recapitulation or treating the material of
the exposition in a conspicuously new way. It is perhaps also worth pointing
out that the kind of clairvoyance that Lambert seems to regard as a “super
power” possessed uniquely by Mozart is in fact widely distributed among the
makers of all kinds of temporally structured works of art—such that, for
example, a playwright is not unlikely to conceive his fifth act simultaneously
with his first or a filmmaker his concluding scene simultaneously with his
opening one. And finally it is perhaps worth pointing out that the Mozart’s-eye
view of a sonata-form movement is exactly consubstantial with that of any
listener who has already heard that movement through to its end at least once
and at least roughly consubstantial with that of any listener who has head
enough sonata-form movements to realize that they generally end with a repetition
of their opening material; and that nevertheless people seem happy to listen to
sonata-form movements over and over again despite knowing how everything is
going to turn out at the end of them. I could say the same thing, mutatis mutandis, about Hamlet or the Iliad or Great Expectations,
but I won’t, first because, as the pullulation of god-awful “spoiler alerts”
over the past quarter-century attests, one of the mutata—namely, the fact that narrative and dramatic works do not end with a repetition of their
opening scenes or chapters or verses—is massive enough to break the analogy,
and second, because most people are not in fact willing to read a novel or play
or epic poem through to the end if they already know how it is going to end to
the extent of knowing whether its protagonist lives or dies, gets married or
divorced, etc. Still, if one were while listening to a sonata-form movement for
the first time to disregard the abovementioned harmonic dynamism altogether;
if, indeed, one were then to disregard the entire harmonic register of the
movement and take it in purely as a succession of melodies and scraps of
melody, and to do so with the same sort of peremptory expectation of novelty
brought to bear by the first-time viewer of a film or reader of a novel–why
then, yes, one would be bound to be both bored and during one’s audition of the
recapitulation portion of that movement. “Still,” the reader cannot but be on
the point of demurring, “that is an awfully big ‘if one were,’ and that ‘one’
denotes only a hypothetical listener. Surely a listener capable of completely ‘tuning
out’ the harmony of a ten-to-fifteen-minute long piece of music has never yet
existed.” But I am afraid that I must forestall the broaching of that demurral
by saying, “I admit that this listener seems quite a fantastical creature, but
I am none too sure that he has never existed. Indeed, I am none too sure that
he was not a documentably living person answering to the name of Constant
Lambert.” Not, of course, that I believe Lambert was actually capable of such
insensibility of harmony, but in a passage very close to the beginning of Music Ho!—a passage, in other words,
that is placed so as to incline one by default to take all its statements of a
general scope for foundational propositions of the author’s argument—he tenders
an assertion about harmony (and rhythm [by which he seems to mean not rhythm in
the strictest sense—i.e., the variation of note lengths in combination with
variations in volume—but rhythm as an organized pattern of such variations [as
in a dance meter or an ostinato], for in the complete absence of rhythm would
not be recognizable as a melody or distinguishable from a tone row]) vis-à-vis
melody that in point of dismissiveness really is worthy of someone suffering
from the meta-harmonic equivalent of total colorblindness.
During the Impressionist
period…[melody] came to be regarded merely as one of the elements in music,
whereas it is not only the most important element but an all-embracing one.
Harmony without melody is only an aural tickling, and rhythm is not even
rhythm—it is only metre, and can have at the most a vaguely mumbo-jumbo appeal,
with no true musical significance […] A composer may have a rudimentary
harmonic sense or a rudimentary rhythmic sense, and yet remain a great composer
on the strength of his line alone.
I doubt I have found another passage of declarative prose
more shockingly subversive in the past decade. For after all (and as Lambert
himself semi-acknowledges later via a different route, i.e., by stating,
“harmony as we understand it does not exist in primitive African music”),
harmony is after all the feature that sets modern Western music and the serious
Western composer apart from the ancient and extra-Occidental riffraff. It is
after all from its inclusion of a harmonic accompaniment that one distinguishes
the performance of a work of modern Western music (even non-serious modern
Western music, i.e. pop music) from the sound of some non-pianizing Musikant striking up a tune on his
lonesome. (And of course Bach’s suites and partitas for solo cello and solo
violin don’t count as vehicles of such a sound, for as everybody who has read
the first line of a set of liner notes of a recording of any of them knows,
despite their prevailing reliance on single-string notation they all somehow
miraculously contrive to delineate continuo-ready harmony from first note—or,
rather, virtual chord—to last.) If harmony is after all only an aural tickling,
oughtn’t all us Occidental listeners to throw out our entire record collections
from Abba to Zemlinsky and force ourselves to become rabid aficionados of the
unharmonized plunkings and clangings of Japanese koto ensembles and Balinese
gamelans? And yet, and yet, no sooner
had I recovered from my shock on reading the passage than I began to think that
in it Lambert might have been onto something. And I am still thinking that he
was onto something therein. By this I do not mean that I am as insensible of
the blandishments of harmony as the counterfactual meta-harmonically colorblind
fellow I mentioned earlier (or, what comes to the same thing, that that fellow
is not counterfactual but actual and that c’est
moi) but rather merely that I wonder to what extent I have ever really
listened preeminently for harmony in a piece of music or that some harmonic
feature of a composition has ever won me over to it or made me regard it as
more formally coherent than I would have done in that feature’s absence. I
recall, for example, Charles Rosen’s mentioning somewhere that a composer need
not rely on inter-movemental melodic correspondences and resemblances to impart
formal unity to his work, that harmonic devices alone were often sufficient to
impart that unity, and that Beethoven’s Appassionata
sonata with its recurring employment of the Neapolitan Sixth chord demonstrated
this; and I recall realizing instantly what he meant by that recurrent use of
that chord in that work, recalled the insistent repetition of that chord in
both the concluding phrase of the principal theme of the first movement and in
the coda of the finale, and immediately afterwards thinking that I did not like
the Appassionata a jot more for the
realization. And complementarily, there
are numerous compositions not noted for their harmonic richesses that I am inordinately fond of—and fond of not for the
reason one is fond of some “guilty pleasure” of an inanely simple-yet-insanely
catchy pop song but for the reason one is fond of a Bach fugue or indeed the
most involute of Schoenberg’s sonata-form movements—namely, because they
possess a combination of coherence and complexity that rewards repeated
audition and reflection. I am thinking in particular here of certain works of
Ralph Vaughan Williams, whose lack of harmonic sophistication has even been
acknowledged by his biographer, Michael Kennedy. I was impelled to seek out
RVW’s Sixth Symphony in 1987 on seeing it described by one of the
far-abovementioned British music mavens (perhaps Kennedy himself) as “the
strangest symphony ever written”; on first hearing it, I certainly found it the
strangest symphony I had ever heard, and nearly forty years later I still find
it among the strangest symphonies I have ever heard even though I have in the
meantime become aurally acquainted with dozens of symphonies (e.g., Webern’s
and Schnittke’s) written in purportedly far stranger and less penetrable styles
than RVW’s purportedly only lightly “modalized” modification of humdrum
late-Romantic tonality. And why do I continue to regard it as superlatively
strange? Why, simply on account of its ingenious concatenation of its melodic
material—at least as near as I can tell from my recollection of what I tend to
dwell on when I not infrequently run my inner ear over my recollection of the
work. I really do find it quite extraordinary the way the first movement,
solely by its selection and arrangement of melodies, contrives to move from
precipitate ominousness to bellicose tumult to sinister searchingness to swinging
(in the big-band sense) hopefulness to pastoral nostalgia and back to
precipitate ominousness within the taut span of about eight minutes. Of course
this capsule description makes the movement sound like a sort of medley or
potpourri, but it is really nothing of the sort because despite the
heterogeneity of mood, the melodies consistently either flow into or recall each
other in a manner that is entirely smooth and logical. And the entire movement
likewise flowed into the next movement (the positional
“slow movement” of the work, albeit possibly not its slowest [(sic) on the
“possibly,” for by way of emphasizing the aural apprehensibility of the
beauties and complexities of this work I am deliberately if conveniently
consulting nothing but my memory of it]) entirely smoothly and logically—viz.,
via without a pause between its final chord and the first note of that movement
(doubtless the uninterruptedness is marked attaca
in the score), a tonic residue of that chord that is followed by a five-note motif so ominous (in keeping with
the attaca continuation of the mood
of the conclusion) and yet so insanely catchy that back in ’87 I could not
forbear from imposing on it the war chant of the cavity creeps, the
arch-villains of a superhero-themed cartoon toothpaste commercial of several
years earlier: We make holes in teeth!
And when the last three notes of that motif—three quarter-notes or eighth-notes
of equal pitch—detached themselves from its main body and began repeating
themselves ever-more insistently with a single quarter-note or eighth-note rest
between each repetition, I could not forbear from chanting all the while:
“Holes in teeth. Holes in teeth. Holes in teeth” as if at the prompting of the
insistent throb of an aural toothache. Of course, RVW could not have had the
cavity creeps in mind back in ’47 when he wrote the Sixth, but I cannot but
suspect and indeed almost assume that via the repetition of that three-note
motif he was trying to evoke a kind of assault consubstantial with that of the
creeps on the twin enameled fortresses of the human mouth—a martial assault, to
be sure, but one relying entirely on brute force and mindless tenaciousness
rather than on skillfully crafted strategy, and in the light of the Sixth’s
immediately postwar provenance, I cannot but reflect that here RVW seems to be
much of a mind with Adorno in the exactly contemporaneous Minima Moralia, wherein TWA remarks that the campaigns of the
Second World War were more like industrial demolition projects than campaigns
in the classic military-scientific sense. To be sure, in the ensuing scherzo,
RVW seems to be something less of a mind with Adorno on martial matters
inasmuch as the main body of that movement is cast as a briskly obstreperous military
march. But this march is by no means in
the vein of the marches of Sousa or Elgar: indeed, in virtue of its rhythmic
dynamism and heavy employment of triangles and cymbals it sounds decidedly Turkish, a quality that not only
affiliates it with Haydn’s and Mozart’s famous Turkish-themed orchestral
compositions but also, and more evocatively in virtue of the more modern
musical language, with the Janissary-aura’d march movements of the Sixth and
Seventh Symphonies of a composer with whom Vaughan Williams has seldom if ever
been compared (and whom he at least affected to despise), Gustav Mahler, an
affiliation strengthened by the brief appearance of a xylophone (an instrument
that figures prominently in the first two movements of GM’s Sixth) in the
transition to the trio, wherein a solo saxophone lends a decidedly jazzy air to
the proceedings, but an incongruously sinisterly
jazzy air that links it to the big-band episodes of the first movement. An
almost irritably brisk yet somehow eerie coda (it always sounds to me as if it
had been lifted note-for-note from the soundtrack of some late-1950s or
early-1960s American suspense-drama series like The Twilight Zone or Alfred
Hitchcock Presents, specifically
a moment thereof coinciding with the protagonist’s discovery of some
disturbing-if-not-quite-terrifying secret ancillary to the main one of the
episode) leads by presumptive attaca to the finale, or as RVW styled it, the
Epilogue, to which he affixed a motto taken from Shakespeare’s Tempest: “We are such stuff as dreams
are made on / And our little lives are rounded by a sleep.” (RVW had a knack
for literary framing devices that also recalls Mahler and has perhaps only been
surpassed by his in erudition and aptness.) This finale is a slow movement (the
tempo is marked “Moderato,” but frequent rests and passages of long-held chords
give it the effect of an Adagio) and therefore perforce enjoins the listener to
compare it to and with all the other famous slow symphony-finales—those of Haydn’s
“Farewell,” Tchaikovsky’s Sixth, and Mahler’s Ninth. Of all of these it is most
like the Mahler, but as if partially in illustration of the implausible thesis
that RVW’s aversion to Mahler was a manifestation of “the anxiety of
influence,” it out-Mahler-Ninths that finale by echoing only its very last
episode, the all-pianissimo strings-only portion from the beginning of the
recapitulation of the second subject onward. And the epigraph of course
suggests that this Epilogue is supposed to be a kind of sequel not only to its
own preceding three movements but also to the Mahler finale: as that movement
signifies a farewell to life, this movement portrays the aftermath of that
farewell, the “sleep” that “rounds” or follows life. (Of course in the context
of Shakespeare’s play the couplet suggests that this sleep not only follows but
also precedes life—i.e., that we
living humans are all dreams in the mind of some other being, perhaps God as
imagined by Berkeley, but in forbearing to complement this sleepy epilogue with
a prologue preceding the first movement, RVW declines to run with this
suggestion [and wisely so as far as I am concerned, for to my imagination’s
ears the conjectural result sounds less Berkeleyan than Pirsigian.]) By default
sleep is the quintessence of reposefulness, and so by default one expects any
musical depiction of sleep to confine itself to musical techniques and gestures
indicative or communicative of repose—piano-and-softer dynamics, rests, long
note values, solidly major-key melodies free of chromatic inflections, and
harmonies that do not linger over dissonances. As I have already mentioned, the
Epilogue makes consistent use of the soft dynamics and intermittent use of rests
and long note values, but the other two it almost entirely abjures. The main
(and “arguably” only) melody is doggedly minor-keyed and more often Moderato
than Adagio in tempo (albeit not so often, per my above remark, as to make one
cease to think of the movement as Adagio-esque) and in its many variations is
it is frequently subjected it rarely settles on a consonant chord. Clearly while
RVW has no desire to present the sleep of the hereafter as the full-blown antithesis
of a reposeful sleep, as a sleep riven by nightmares, he does wish to present
it as a sleep only rarely utterly free of anxiety. Indeed, he chooses to conclude
the movement and symphony in a decidedly unsettling manner—viz., by having the
strings oscillate repeatedly and ever-more-softly between two chords differing
from each other by the interval of a semitone, the most disruptive of chromatic
inflections, until in the final measures the music has become so quiet that it
is virtually impossible to tell by ear whether or not the work ends on the
tonic triad. This is an altogether spooky or unheimlich conclusion, a conclusion that fully bears out the Twilight Zone-like apprehensions of the
abovementioned coda of the scherzo. Alban Berg concluded his Lyric Suite in essentially the same
manner twenty years earlier, only with a solo violin instead of an entire
violin section and a major third instead of a minor second. And now that I have
mentioned the Lyric Suite, it occurs
to me that the only parallels to Vaughan Williams’s Sixth that I can locate in
my entire history of listening—parallels, that is, in point of
initial-cum-enduring strangeness-cum-engagingness—are certain genre-bending
atonal works like the Lyric Suite
rather than any works known officially as symphonies, sonatas, string quartets
autc. (apart, perhaps, from Schoenberg’s Second String Quartet, which, in including
a part for a soprano singer in its last two movements is “arguably” less of a
proper string quartet than the Lyric
Suite). And this reflection brings in its train another reflection, one
that lends additional support to Lambert’s notion of “harmony without melody as
a mere aural tickling,” namely, that I tend to find the works of Schoenberg and
his disciples comprehensible (comprehensible, that is, in a way that subsumes
the just-mentioned strangeness-cum-engagingness, for total incomprehension is
the handmaid [or possibly mistress] of boredom rather than of Unheimlichkeit) not to the extent to
which they remain tethered to conventional tonality but to the extent to which
their motifs and motif-constellations have strong melodic profiles. Thus I find
Berg’s Chamber Concerto the most difficult of all his works even though it
antedates the Lyric Suite and therefore
more shallowly assimilates Schoenberg’s twelve-tone method than the later work
does, simply because I have trouble locating the recurrence of any motif in the
Concerto apart from the four note one played by the violin as that instrument’s
first solo passage. And among the movements of the Lyric Suite I find the first easiest to follow even though it is
one of the work’s three twelve-tone movements (the others being “freely atonal”
in construction and hence presumably more abundant in vestiges of tonal
harmony) because all its motivic material is emphatically presented in
horizontal outline within its first few measures. I likewise have had little
trouble following the argument of the first movement of Schoenberg’s Fourth
String Quartet because it presents at its outset two principal subjects that
contrast as starkly from each other as those of the subjects of a classic
(i.e., non-monothematic) classical-epoch sonata-form movement, and because
there are few ensuing passages that do not contain manifest echoes and
modifications of those themes; or the argument of its second movement, because
it is in structure a cantabile theme and variations, whereas that work’s
scherzo and finale remain fairly opaque to me after dozens or perhaps even
hundreds of listening-sessions because they contain long passages in which it
is difficult (at least for me) to discern an echo or anticipation of melodic
material hailing from elsewhere in the movement. On the other hand, the absence
from all these compositions of the familiar elements of harmony, of familiar
vertical combinations of notes--of common chords, seventh chords, augmented
chords, diminished chords, etc.—is no impediment whatsoever to my understanding
of their respective arguments; just as the presence of these elements in the
music of Vaughan Williams’s music affords only negligible aid to my
understanding the arguments of their works. Now “far be it from me” to infer
from the nugatoriness of harmony to my comprehension of post-1900 music that
harmony insgesamt has always been as
much of a mere “aural tickling” as Lambert supposed it be; and indeed, I am
inclined to think that at least in the music of the two great pre-Beethovenian
classical masters, Haydn and Mozart, harmony surpasses melody as a
form-constituting attribute. “That said,” inasmuch as tonality is first and
foremost (or perhaps even solely) a harmonic system, the fact that I derive
little benefit from harmonic elements in
“processing” works of either “late tonality” or atonality suggests that
the entire break with tonality by Schoenberg and his disciples was less
momentous than it has been cracked up to be—cracked up to be, to be sure, with
especially crepitative force by Lambert’s abovementioned
colleagues-cum-compatriots, the members of the British musicological
establishment, but also not-unforcefully by Adorno, who, in keeping with the
spirit of Berg’s essay “Why Is Schoenberg’s Music So Difficult?” was keen to
emphasize the continuities between Schoenberg’s tonal and post-tonal works,
clove to the received view that the break with tonality in Pierrot Lunaire, the Second String Quartet, and the Three Piano
Pieces was the most decisively transformative event in Schoenberg’s career (and
in the career of modern music en bloc). One might expect that Lambert, thinking as
little of harmony as he does, would regard the tonal-atonal divide an unworthy
of a single ascending fissure, but that is not exactly the case. Indeed, when
writing about the divide directly he gives one reason to suspect that he was
the Ur-cum-arch English
atonality-basher, so vehemently and categorically does he reject Schoenberg et
al.’s post-tonal modus operandi. He decries it as unnatural with a natural-scientific—specifically
zoological—precision most dogmatic tonalists are happy to dispense with in
favor of a more narrow appeal to human nature in the Aristotelian tradition:
“The unco, a species of Malayan ape noted for its singing in quarter-tones, is,
as far as one can tell, the only living creature, capable of vocal production,
that possesses no sense of tonality.” (Here it is perhaps “worth mentioning,” if
only parenthetically, that Schoenberg was only too willing to concede a
natural-scientific basis to tonality, likening it as he did somewhere to the
laws of gravity and aerodynamics, and from this comparison he derived the
inference that inasmuch as we have managed to fly in defiance of those laws via
the aeroplane, we should not feel inhibited from writing music that flouts the
prescriptions of tonality. [Here it is perhaps “worth mentioning,” if only sub-parenthetically,
that it may have been this aeronautical conceit that further suggested to
Schoenberg his late-life comparison of the “breather of air from another
planet” in his Second String Quartet’s finale, his first fully atonal piece, to
an astronaut. {Here it is definitely “worth mentioning,” if only
sub-parenthetically, that this comparison exasperated Adorno.}]) And he
reckoned that atonality’s unnaturalness doomed it to permanent obscurity:
“While the listener finds that most aural stumbling blocks disappear with
repeated experience, it is rarely that he overcomes the initial strangeness of
atonalism, even when sufficiently familiar with the idiom to detect immediately
the difference between its few masters and the many fumbling secondraters.” On
the other hand, Lambert does not seem to be wedded to tonality as a complete
system centering on all of the above-listed elements of harmony and on the
conventions that flow into and out of them. He does not seem, in other words,
to be thinking of tonality as narrowly as most of its defenders and detractors
alike tend to think of it—viz., as synonymous with diatonicism, on tonality that pivots on the distinction between the
major and minor modes and that relies on chord progressions proceeding via
combinations of the above-listed chords and resolving in conventional cadences.
One gathers this not only on negative grounds—on the grounds that he does not
explicitly defend the properties of diatonicism, but also on positive ones, on
the grounds that he does explicitly champion certain composers (e.g., Satie,
Debussy, and Bartók) who at least intermittently wrote music that could not
strictly have been described as diatonic. To specify the contrast between
Lambert and the usual tonality-boosters in both sharper and more general terms:
unlike them, he has no investment in tonality as a traditional system to be clung to superstitiously or
quasi-religiously. Unlike them, he does not think that there was an historical
moment in, say, 1890, when composers had finally ascertained the just
proportion between consonances and dissonances, between home keys and the keys
to which they modulated, between diatonic intervals and chromatic ones, and so
on, and that if composers had stuck to that just proportion ever since,
everything would be perfectly hunky-dory—that effectively, the twentieth
century would have been chock-full of works that were every bit as brilliant,
as indisputably worthy of designation as masterpieces, as the best late works
of Brahms, Wagner, Tchaikovsky, Bruckner, et al. without being a jot more
harmonically adventurous than them.
Indeed, Lambert seems to have no interest in any aspect of post ca.-1600 Occidental serious music as worthy of
veneration qua tradition. One gathers this from, for example, his attitude to
certain of both Schoenberg’s and Bach’s most legendarily complicated
contrapuntal works:
The innumerable inversions,
augmentations, diminutions and crabwise canons of Schönberg’s later works can,
for the most part, be detected only by the visual analyst with time to spare.
That a work is capable of elaborate analysis proves nothing, for a bad work may
be just as interesting from the analyst’s point of view as a good one.
[…]
Schönberg’s contrapuntal
writing varies in quality as much as Bach’s fugues: at times it is worthy to be
set before the more introspective of the ’48, while at others it sinks below
the level of the Mirror fugues in the Kunst
der Fugue—which, being visually conceived are, apart from their more
agreeable consonance open to precisely the same objections as Schönberg’s
crabwise canons. We must distinguish between the occasional and expressive
counterpoint in Pierrot Lunaire and
the contrapuntal obsessions of the wind quintet.
In the eyes of many—perhaps even most—historians and
analysts of serious Western music, the mirror fugues in the Kunst der Fugue are among the supreme
achievements of that music and are to be regarded as such precisely because most of their contrapuntal
transformations can “be detected only by the visual analyst with time to
spare.” While I cannot in any frankness or candor say that I agree with them on
this point, I cannot in all frankness and candor say that I agree with Lambert
thereon either. My reservations here spring mainly from my inability to discern
any categorical or definite distinction between the qualities in written music
that are detectable by the ear and those that are detectable by the eye alone. (I
say “mainly” because there is at least “a case to be made,” however feeble, for
notated music as an artefact worth taking in through the eyes alone.) This
distinction is obviously not as definite or categorically “binary” as the one
between the frequencies in the electromagnetic spectrum that are visible to the
human eye and those that are visible only to certain insects or the one between
the frequencies in the auditory spectrum that are audible by the human ear and
those only audible to dogs. If composers like Bach and Schoenberg had written
fugues with contrapuntal combinations as inaudible in the same way and for the
same reason as a super-high pitch is inaudible, one would have good reason to
upbraid them for exceeding their remit as composers (or simply for being
absolutely barmy). But it seems to me that the combinations in Bach’s mirror
fugues are inaudible, at least to most listeners (and certainly to the present
writer-cum-listener), for an entirely different reason—namely, that they
require more concentration than one can bring to bear on the act of listening;
in other words, that they exceed the powers of the human mind rather than those
of the human ear. And of course this defect of the human mind, the defect of
insufficient concentration is itself not a defect that can be categorically
“binarily” distinguished from its complementary virtue, that of adequate
concentration. Poor concentration is not a defect on the order of the defect in
certain powers that it would seem to be safe to attribute to all human minds—say,
the inability to picture an object of greater than three dimensions; for the
power of concentration obviously varies from individual to individual. To be
sure-ish, there is presumably some threshold of intensity-cum-duration of
concentration that no human mind has ever crossed, but one cannot merely by
consulting one’s own private experience as a concentrator. I am quite certain
that my mind is incapable of exerting the intensity-cum-duration of
concentration required of, say, a chess grand master—the ability to think “If I
make this move, my opponent is bound to make one of x moves, which move of his will require me to make one of xx
moves minus all moves excluded by that move he will have just made, which move will
require him to make one of Xx^x moves minus all moves excluded by my
previous two moves,” and so on until one has arrived at an initial move that cannot
eventually result in one’s own checkmating—but I am pretty sure that such
concentration is humanly possible because I know that chess grand masters are
said to apply such a pattern of thinking with not-infrequent success and that
their games with each other not-infrequently end in draws. Now while I assuredly don’t know that the
concentration requisite to spotting a mirror fugue by the ear alone is humanly
possible, this may not be because it isn’t humanly possible but merely because the
humans who have found it possible have not seen fit to tell or write of their
aural mirror-fugue spotting ability–this most likely because unlike chess-playing,
music-listening is not a competitive activity (at least not officially), such
that no aural mirror-fugue spotter can have much of an incentive for distinguishing
his aurally derived analysis of a mirror fugue from the analysis thereof that
he might have derived solely from an ocular perusal of work’s score. I belabor
this point not so much because I have any “skin in the game” (or, rather,
non-game) of demonstrating the aural recognizability of super-complex
contrapuntal structures as because in the culminating moment of his argument Lambert
himself turns out to set great store by a certain objectively notated musical
property that I at least find as impossible to spot aurally as I do such
structures. But precisely because he
does not address this property until that culminating moment, I am going to
defer addressing his addressing of it until the culminating moment of this
essay in favor of addressing a question ineluctably elicited by our
super-recent discovery of his indifference to tonality as a harmonic
system-cum-tradition–namely, to what extent is Lambert an aesthetic
ahistoricist-cum-nominalist (which is to say, inter alia, the philosophical
antipode of Adorno, an [and perhaps the]
arch aesthetic historicist-cum-realist) at least as regards the art of music?
We can safely conclude that that extent is not infinite because we know that he
regarded the balanced repetitions of sonata form as indissociable from the
hierarchical social organization of the aristocratic era and the motoric
repetitions of Hindemith’s Gebrauchsmusik
as both belatedly Victorian-industrial and timely-ly post-German Romantic. And
yet his reduction of tonality to its most basic property, the centering of
melodies and chords on a specific tone, suggests that he believes that all of
music’s most essential properties are freely available to composers at any
given historical moment and that it is merely a sort of largely historically
contingent collective failure of imagination that has led them to employ
certain elements of music resourcefully to the detriment of certain others at
certain historical moments. And that certainly seems to be the case to judge by
his attitude to the other properties of music and their historical emplacement.
For example, he asserts that the music of Elizabethan England was far more
rhythmically sophisticated than any of the music of the Classical and Romantic
periods of any country and implies that the later composers were less
rhythmically interesting than their sixteenth-century English predecessors
simply because they were less interested in rhythm. I can certainly at least
see what he is driving at in his assertion about the Elizabethan composers even
if the composition that has compelled me to see it is not of Elizabethan
provenance but rather a twentieth-century pastiche of a classic Elizabethan
form–viz., “My Bonnie Lass She Smelleth,” one of “P.D.Q. Bach’s” madrigals from
his cycle The Triumphs of Thusnelda
(a composition with which, incidentally, I am familiar only aurally, through
the recording of it included as a sort of filler to the LP of the premiere
recording of “P.D.Q.”’s “half-act” opera The
Stoned Guest). At a certain point in the final occurrence of the refrain of
this piece (a piece which, being a madrigal is a capella from beginning to end), the singer of the bass part
(performed in the recording by none other than “P.D.Q.”’s
“discoverer”-cum-creator, Prof. Peter Schickele) breaks away from his
colleagues and “riffs” on the refrain’s lyrics (lyrics consisting entirely of
iterations, curtailments, and extensions of the nonsense phrase “Fa-la-la” à la
the refrain of the Christmas carol “Deck the Halls” [a correspondence that
enables “P.D.Q.” to conclude the piece with a word for word-cum-note for note
quotation of that song]), developing them into an exuberantly protracted
bebop-style “scat” solo that I at least would be punishingly hard-pressed to
divide into any non-arbitrarily apportioned succession of bar lines, let alone
to reduce to a single time signature, be it one as fringy as 12/32 or 20/16
(although I can only presume that it has been satisfactorily notated, as
“P.D.Q.”’s works have all been published as scores intended for complete
realization on their basis alone). Here, as with most if not all of “P.D.Q.”s evocations
of popular modern styles and procedures in a purportedly ancient-cum-hifalutin
context (including the just-mentioned evocation of “Deck the Halls”), while the
immediate humor derives mainly if not entirely from the incongruity of the
evocation, the more lasting effect is the inculcation of a sense of the substantive
continuity between the representative samples of the two types of music. The
scat solo in “My Bonnie Lass” ultimately
only works even as a musical joke because a sixteenth-century madrigal handles
rhythm in a way that does not differ drastically from the way in which it is
handled in a modern jazz improvisation. And my discovery of this paucity of
difference via “My Bonnie Lass” impels
me not to dismiss out of hand Lambert’s prima-vista
overblown contention that jazz single-handedly re-imparted to music a type and degree
of rhythmic vitality that had remained dormant since the decline of the
madrigal, a contention illustrated by such assertions as “On paper the
rhythmical groupings of a tune like ‘Step on the Blues’ (from The Girl Friend) bear a striking
resemblance to the irregular groupings to be found in the music of Edmund
Turges (circa 1500) […].” (I am unsure, incidentally, if Lambert’s
bibliographic information is entirely accurate here, and the online reference
source of first resort isn’t giving me much help in ascertaining if he is. It
identifies The Girl Friend as “a
musical comedy with music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Lorenz Hart and book by
Herbert Fields” but does not list “Step on the Blues” as one of that work’s
songs, while the 78-disc label of the only recording of “Step on the Blues” I
have managed to access via YouTube, an instrumental arrangement performed by
the “Ipana Troubadours, S.C. Lanin—Director,” credits “Conrad, Donaldson, and
Harbach” as the song’s composers and “Kitty’s Kisses” as the work from which it
hails.) And I am all the more sympathetically inclined to this view of jazz
when I find that it is the basis of a further contention to which I have
already avowed my intuitive allegiance in this essay, viz. that English sounds
more natural when sung in the context of a jazz song than in a German-style
song—i.e., a Singpsiel number or Lied—that happens to have English
lyrics:
We still go on setting English
poetry in the totally unsuitable rhythms drawn from the German Volkslied. Actually, had not the course of English music
been interrupted first by Handel and then, more gravely, by Mendelssohn, we
should probably have found the rhythmic tradition of English music very much
more eccentric and more full of ‘conceits’ than the tradition of jazz. As it
is, certain jazz songs show a more apt feeling for the cadence of English
speech than any music since the seventeenth century.
But when I put these contentions to the test by attempting
to apply them to the phenomena to which they refer, I find that they do not
hold up as sufficiently serviceable generalizations—that the phenomena either
do not seem to bear them out at all or to bear them out too fitfully or in only
one of numerous significant registers. For example, English is after all at
root a Germanic language, Lieder are
after all German poems set to music, and technically speaking, German and
English versification are indistinguishable: in both languages poems prevailingly
consist of rhyming lines of stressed and unstressed syllables (a concurrence
that presumably greatly contributed to the establishment of Shakespeare as a
classic in the German-speaking world via Schlegel’s and Tieck’s translations
[for all of Shakespeare’s verse is accentual-syllabic and an underappreciated
portion of it rhymes even in the plays]). It is accordingly difficult to see
how the compositional practices employed in setting German poems to music
should not work equally well for the setting thereto of English poems. I own
that I still find most serious
English vocal music unnatural and stilted-sounding, but perhaps that’s “just
me”—or more specifically (as already conjectured in “Weasel Goes the Pop”) just
a knock-on effect of my having heard English sung in pop songs long before
hearing it sung in operas and serious-musical song cycles. But perhaps I am
overlooking something in the positive side of the comparison—i.e., failing to
discern a feature of the prosody of jazz that adds something quintessentially English to vocal music? To the
extent that “Step on the Blues” is as representative as Lambert represents it
to be, I infer that I am overlooking no such thing, for on listening to the
abovementioned arrangement of that tune I encounter but one tiny moment in
which the rhythmical grouping is at all irregular—a moment at which a phrase
that I take to correspond to the words of the song’s title (i.e., inasmuch as
when I hear it I reflexively want to sing it as ‘Step ON the blues’) is repeated
two or three times in succession on its own in a broken-record like way before
being allowed to segue into its succeeding phrase the third or fourth time
round. This moment is certainly
rhythmically reminiscent of the “Fa-la-la”-ing bits of “My Bonnie Lass” (which
will have to do as a succedaneum for the groupings of Turges, for I hear no
such groupings in the single recording of a Turges composition that I have
managed to dredge up at the Chewb and yet I dare not regard it as
representative), but in what sense is it “characteristic of the cadences of
English speech”? Are Anglophones more inclined to non-semantic repetition in
their everyday chit-chat than Germanophones? (Well, perhaps—after all, Max
Headroom was as Anglo-American as Winston Churchill.) And it is not as though
this sort of thing is utterly unprecedented in the mainstream of the Austro-German
classical tradition: right off the top of my head I can already think of an
example of almost exactly the same rhythmic pattern in the minuet of Haydn’s
Symphony No. 65 in A major. In short,
Lambert seems grossly to overstate the extent of both the German word-setting
tradition’s deviation from its English counterparts and jazz’s rectification of
this deviation. He overstates thus by conflating two separate phenomena—the
musical setting of verse and the subordination of verse to musical treatment. The correct way to describe the relation
between the two phenomena would have been roughly as follows: Lied-style composition is largely and
equally well-suited to setting both English and German verse to music, but Lied-style-song composers both German
and English, the Elizabethan madrigalists and jazz composers were not content
with setting to music poems as they appeared on the page: they liked to repeat certain
lines and portions of lines. And so they availed themselves of a technique no
less typical of eighteenth and nineteenth-century German instrumental music than
of pre-eighteenth-century English vocal music—the repetition of rhythmic-cum-melodic
phrases and units of rhythm-cum-melody even smaller than phrases. (Of course in
the case of jazz, one is most often not dealing with a pre-extant poem but with
a set of words, such that the repetition of the words readily arises from of
the repetition of the rhythmic-cum-melodic units.) But this recasting of his
argument would not have satisfied Lambert, inasmuch as he would have refused to
“concede my major” that eighteenth and nineteenth-century German instrumental
music was rhythmically vital enough to supply jazz composers sufficient impetus
to resourceful repetition: “Without wishing in any way to denigrate the
magnificent achievement of the German romantic school from Weber to Mahler,” he
writes in the paragraph immediately preceding the above-quoted one that
mentions the Volkslied, “we can
without exaggeration say that it is remarkably deficient in purely rhythmic
interest. Wagner himself was conscious of this failing and admitted it with a
deprecatory ‘Well you can’t have everything’ air.” It would be nice to know
where Wagner made the admission in question, as this would allow me to clinch
or reject my conjecture that it was made regarding his own output exclusively
rather than “the entire German romantic school from Weber to Mahler [and if the
so, perforce partly clairvoyantly, inasmuch as Mahler was still a 23-year-old
composer-in-training in 1883, the year of Wagner’s death]” for I am happy
enough to concede that the rhythmic sludginess and sluggishness of Wagner’s
music has been known to set at least the present writer a-dozing. In any case,
the inescapable rhetorical effect of ascribing the admission to Wagner is to
impel the reader to regard him as the central and most representative member of
“the German romantic school,” which is hardly fair, what with his being an
especially soppy straw man in point of “purely rhythmic interest,” and on
considering him as such a figure, as in considering “Step Up the Blues” qua
reincarnation of the spirit of 1500, one is immediately assailed by robust
counterexamples—from the peculiar cross-rhythms in the chorus of jeerers in the
first scene of Der Freischutz (with
the women singing a succession of unsyncopated notes of uniformly short length while
the men chime in with notes of varying length at irregular intervals) to the
bouncy syncopation-fest in the coda of the Brahms’s Second Symphony [which,
admittedly, Lambert would have excluded from “the German romantic school” on
account of Brahms’s status as the official successor of Beethoven qua
pre-romantic symphonist] to the “Panic” percussion episode towards the end of
the first movement of Mahler’s Third. Still, even supposing one must concede
that German music of the nineteenth century is less rhythmically vital than
that of other nations and periods, one is surely entitled to query whether this
comparative rhythmic effeteness was not a necessary price to pay for the
acquisition of other, equally valuable qualities that have not been as
prevalent elsewhere and at other times, or to recast the question in general
terms, if musical-compositional practice does not inevitably entail tradeoffs, if
it is not impossible for any style or method of composition to be all things to
all ears at once. But Lambert presumably believes that the answer to this
question is no; or perhaps it has never occurred to him to ask it. Hence, either
way, neither his association of sonata form with the aristocratic
pre-French-Revolutionary organization of society, nor his association of Mussorgsky’s
rejection of symphonic development with democratization, nor his pillorying of
Hindemith’s Gebrauchsmusik as
belatedly Victorian-industrial can be regarded as genuinely historicist because
it perforce follows that if there are no reasons of any kind why all musical
qualities might not all coexist with equal salience in a given work or in the
compositional practice of a given composer or geographical location there
cannot be any specifically historical reason why all such qualities might not
coexist therein. Lambert self-evidently must not believe, for example, that Gebrauchsmusik’s belatedness arose from
a sort of Althusserian law of “uneven development” among the arts, from a
notion that there is or was something specific about music in contrast to the
other arts that prevented it from embodying the spirit of the Victorian age in
its technique until the Victorian age was history in the fullest sense, for if
he could believe any such thing he presumably would not maintain that any efficient
cause so contingent and extra-musical as the popularity of German composers
like Handel and Mendelssohn prevented the English from exploiting the precedent
of rhythmic vitality established by their own pre-eighteenth century composers.
And while he does causally link the partial supersedence of sonata form by more
flexible forms such as those of Mussorgsky’s operas to the rise of nationalism,
he by no means claims that the supersedence of these forms in turn by the
innumerable musical forms and movements of the early twentieth century has
arisen from any abeyance of nationalism as a political force. To the contrary,
writing as he does in the very year of the Nazis’ rise to power in Germany and
several years into Mussolini’s government of Italy, he cannot avoid
acknowledging (albeit only briefly and occasionally) that nationalism is more
powerful than ever before as such a force. Although such a wantonly
unsystematic approach is undeniably quite bracing and engaging if only on
account of its sheer brazen insouciance and complete absence of academic
stuffiness, it is obviously quite “problematic” for at least two salient
reasons. First, however mysterious or even ultimately unfathomable the
connection between music and history in the big traditional sense may be, music
clearly does not interact with history in such an intermittent and a la carte
manner as Lambert seems to suppose. If rhythmically vital home-grown English
music failed to thrive owing to Handel and Mendelssohn’s popularity, their
popularity was largely owing neither to extra-musical circumstances nor to
merely idiosyncratic qualities of their respective musical corpora. It was
largely owing, rather, to these corpora’s participation in a certain stylistic
tradition of Italian and German origin that had (as Lambert himself fleetingly
acknowledges) whose methods and techniques had become the musical lingua franca
of Europe and that therefore would have dominated musical taste in Britain
through other composers in that tradition (and indeed did dominate it through
at least two others—Haydn and J.C. Bach) even if a single note of Handel or
Mendelssohn had never been played there. It is accordingly as silly to blame
the absence of rhythmically vital music from eighteenth-and-nineteenth-century
England on the popularity of Handel and Mendelssohn as it would be to blame the
absence of Gesualdo-esque levels of chromaticism from
eighteenth-and-nineteenth-century Italian music on the popularity of
Rossini. Second, there is something extremely
unconvincing and unsatisfying about a notion of music (or of any other art)
whose constituent elements and registers are not even expected to aspire to cohere
with one another. Even if we grant melody pride of formal place as Lambert does
(and as I have already effectively granted he is right in dong) and grant
second-place importance to rhythm (as Lambert appears to do in repining so
stridently at lack of rhythmic vitality), surely it does not follow from these
concessions that the formal relation of the harmony to melody and rhythm is of
negligible importance, as Lambert implies when he writes, for example, “Much of
the emotional stimulus of jazz is due to the piquant contrast between the terse
and slangy rhythm and the somewhat glucose harmony.” Of course it will be
instantly demurred that here Lambert is making a point diametrically opposed to
the position that I am imputing to him, that here he is actually saying that
the interrelation of rhythm and harmony in jazz is of paramount importance, but
what he is actually saying is merely that the fortuitous coincidence of certain qualities in jazz harmony and jazz rhythm
produces a perversely desirable effect. He is saying that the harmony “works”
in a certain perverse sense, and quite in defiance of the presumptive
intentions of the musicians involved, despite not working at all in the way
that harmony works in complete conformity with the presumptive intentions of
the composer in a well-composed piece of serious music. (A normative
counterexample to this perverse functioning of superfluous elements is afforded
by the cello parts of Haydn’s piano trios. As is well known, they merely double
the bassline of the piano and consequently contribute nothing substantial to
the musical argument, such that they could be stripped away entirely and the
ex-trios would function perfectly well as sonatas for violin and piano. And yet
inasmuch as they do not contradict the musical argument, it is quite clear that
they consistently serve a purely coloristic purpose, that of adding greater
weight to the bassline, making it sound “bassier.” The “glucosity” of jazz
harmony as described by Lambert bears more fruitful comparison to those moments
in Haydn’s early string quartets in which the cello is suddenly directed to
play in a higher register than the viola and thereby to deprive the music of a
bassline, moments that suggest inadvertency on the composer’s part, as if [in
the approximate words of a twentieth-century British music critic whom I now
unable to identify, just as I am now unable to pinpoint the book in which I
read them] Haydn has briefly forgotten that he is not still writing for a
continuo ensemble in which the bassline has already been supplied by the
contrabass.) And to the extent that this is an accurate generalization about
jazz, even the best jazz merits the kind and degree of disdain heaped on it by
Adorno, and Lambert’s apologia for jazz is no apologia at all but a
condemnation malgré lui-même. I wish
I could more than figuratively frame such howlers of Lambert’s as this sentence
on jazz and the passages on German rhythmic poverty versus English rhythmic
vitality because they deserve to be textbook examples of the conceptual
limitations of the ad hoc anti-philosophical Anglo-Saxon approach to the
history of art and art-like phenomena and hence of the desirability of an
approach such as Adorno’s that does not disguise its aspiration to relate even
the most fine-grained elements of these phenomena to the most monumental
aspects of other historically mediated phenomena in the most philosophically
robust terms. To be sure, the adoption of such an approach by no means
guarantees that one will accurately account for everything and be fair to
everyone, and in his employment of his “negative Hegelian” version of this
approach Adorno evidently got certain things wrong and shortchanged certain
people. As we have already seen, in underrating the extent to which the most
characteristic technical qualities of Beethoven’s music had already been achieved
by Haydn he made the break between the “petit-bourgeois” and “heroic” epochs of
the bourgeois era seem cleaner than it actually was. And Charles Rosen was
certainly onto something when he disparaged Adorno’s condescending attitude
even to the Russian composers he admired most as “cultural racism.” And my own
experience as a listener has persuaded me that he was too uncharitable to mainstream
composers of the second rank (as opposed to full-fledged oddballs like Satie),
particularly non-German ones. I find that while he was seldom if ever wide of
the mark in his appraisal of them, I cannot bring myself to regard them as
completely superfluous to my life as a listener, which in turn impels me to
suppose that their music possesses historically exigent qualities that he
overlooked. To be sure, at bottom Dvorak is a sort of poor man’s Tchaikovsky
crossed with a poor man’s Brahms, and I cannot regard the prospect of a
complete aural survey of his voluminous chamber and orchestral output without a
pang of proleptic weariness à la the young man in the film who already knows
that he “didn’t have a good time” at the bar he has yet to visit, but of the
double-handful of Dvorak works with which I am familiar there are a
near-handful that I regard with genuine fondness and even admiration—for
example, the Slavonic Dances, which I
find slightly superior to Brahms’s Hungarian
Dances qua “folkish” miniatures. And to be sure, Elgar comes across as
nothing more or better than a sort of stiff-upper-lipped Mahler in plus-fours,
but is such a figure entirely superfluous to music’s share of the conveyance of
the Weltgeist? Do not certain of Elgar’s
best works, such as the Second Symphony and the Sea Pictures, supplement Mahler’s symphonies and song cycles as
substantively in their own way as do the Little
Mermaid and Lyric Symphony of
Alexander Zemlinsky, near-double of Mahler to whom Adorno may have been far
kinder largely on account of his close personal and pedagogical ties to Arnold
Schoenberg? But despite all these shortcomings and blind spots, Adorno’s
philosophy-cum-history-cum-sociology of music offers a more or less compelling
account (I refuse for likeability’s sake to stoop to employing the other n-word
[i.e., n**r****e] let alone the even more execrable other s-word [i.e., s***y])
of why and how music changed when, where, and how it did between, say, the late
seventeenth and the latish twentieth century (it having been perforce prevented
from weighing in on musical change in the full-blown late twentieth century
owing to Adorno’s death in 1969). It is an account that more or less
satisfactorily explains (or can easily be made to explain), for example, why
native-composed madrigals and whimsical English-language entertainments like
Purcell’s King Arthur died out in
Britain and German and Italian composers of operas, symphonies, and the like
became popular in their place—viz., because the native notated music of
pre-1700 was too “aristocratic” in a bluffly barbarous late-medieval sort of
way, and the version of the aristocratic that acquired ascendancy in the early
eighteenth century was already half bourgeois. And it is an account that more
or less satisfactorily explains why Wagner is a less than totally satisfactory
composer—viz., not, as Lambert supposes, because his music is too rhythmically monotonous
but because it is too harmonically and melodically unsystematic. It moreover more or less satisfactorily
explains why Wagner came to write such harmonically and melodically
unsystematic music in the first place—viz., because he was a typical
middle-class showman of his age, the age of the definitively post-heroic
bourgeoisie. (To be sure, Adorno was not alone in tendering this thesis about
Wagner, or theses about Wagner along such lines, for Jacques Barzun said more
or less the same thing at more or less exactly the same moment in his
triographic screed Darwin Marx Wagner
[a book written and published, like Adorno’s In Search of Wagner, in the very early 1940s]. But as it indicates
in its title, Barzun’s book is interested in Wagner’s music primarily as an
embodiment of certain concepts likewise embodied in the work of Darwin and Marx
[notably evolution as a supposedly inexorable and purely mechanical process] and
therefore engages only fleetingly and superficially with its technical aspects.
This is “worth pointing out” because it shows that a contextualizing practice
as general in scope as cultural history [for Barzun styled himself a cultural
historian] is as inadequate to a treatment of a specific art as an inadequately
contextual treatment thereof such as Lambert’s.) Finally but not finically, it
quite persuasively presents Schoenberg’s leap to atonality as an inevitable
response to the shambolic state in which tonality had been left by Wagner and
both jazz and neoclassicism’s cleaving to tonality as an equally inevitable
capitulation to this shambolic state, all the while tightly linking these
developments to changes in individual and collective psychology throughout the
Occident. Not too shabby, eh? Not that I maintain that Adorno’s
philosophy-cum-history-cum-sociology of music is the only possible coherent and
compelling account of music of the quarter-millennium that it covers but that
no other account thereof that even aspires to such “interdisciplinary” scope
and depth has yet appeared. The account comprised by Charles Rosen’s two great
period-centered studies, The Classical
Style and The Romantic Generation,
probably comes closest, but while these books laudably devote far more detail
to the analysis of scores than Adorno ever did, they are much more modest in scope
than even Adorno’s slimmest monographs, contenting themselves à la Barzun with
loosely linking the changes in musical practice to certain chronologically
parallel developments in politics and philosophy. “Schon gut, schon gut. I catch. But to return to Lambert vis-à-vis
Adorno: if Adorno on the whole despite his shortcomings almost everything right
with his systematizing approach, while Lambert gets many if not most things
wrong with his scattershot approach, why do you value Music Ho! at all, let alone find that it bears serious comparison
with Adorno’s corpus of writings on music?” I value Music Ho! and indeed value it quite highly first because of
Lambert’s above-discussed knacks (if not geniuses) for vividly describing key
phenomena in the history of the experience of listening and for justifying the
best composers of the abovementioned second rank (composers among whom I number
Vaughan Williams, whose justification by Lambert I have effectively extended
and amplified in my above account of VW’s Sixth Symphony), and second because despite availing himself
of an entirely different method from Adorno’s (or, indeed, a non-method),
Lambert starts with a core desideratum for music that is essentially the same
as Adorno’s (not to mention mine) and arrives at the same conclusion regarding
the shortcomings of contemporary music in relation to this desideratum: he
thinks that music should not repeat itself whether the referent of “itself” is
music written in earlier historical periods or music written earlier in a
specific composition, and he believes that much of music of the early twentieth
century has been repeating itself in both these bad senses (which is why his
book is subtitled “a study of music in decline”
despite his guarded enthusiasm for jazz and certain composers of the second
rank). Like Adorno, he is not a Julian Lloyd-Webber figure who thinks it would
be all fine and dandy for composers to keep writing in the musical language of
D’Indy until the end of time. Like Adorno, he regards music that repeats itself
as inauthentic and lacking in truth content, even if he contingently
articulates this view in terms that Adorno would have abhorred as inauthentic
and false because obsolete or insufficiently historically mediated–in terms,
that is, of quality and utility (as in the above-quoted example likening a
piano concerto to a pair of shoes). One sees this laudable horror of repetition
in his general disdain for sonata form. To be sure, he was wrong to disdain
sonata form as practiced by Haydn and Mozart (as he dimly seems to be aware
when he passingly terms the repetitions in Haydn “charming” because “in Haydn
and Mozart our emotional reaction is derived from the movement as a whole”)
because in that version of sonata form the repetition subsists in meaningful
tension with harmonic difference, but he was not wrong to disdain it as
practiced in “the typical nineteenth-century symphony as represented by
Tchaikovsky No. 5, Dvořák’s From the New World, and César Franck in
D minor” because in these works the repetitions are very much note-for-note
echoes bereft of any meaning-bearing harmonic difference. (Although in singling
out these works as the typical
symphonies of their period he undersells nineteenth-century composers’
awareness of the antiquatedness of sonata form and their efforts to modify it
to suit the exigencies of their material. In neither Tchaikovsky’s Fourth nor
his Sixth Symphony, is any section of first-movement sonata form dealt with in
a straightforwardly conventional way.) His irritation with nineteenth-century
sonata form is essentially consubstantial with the attitude expressed by Elliott
Carter towards the school of musical composition known as minimalism seventy
years later:
[Minimalism is]
death. If you write one bar and then repeat it over again, the music ceases to
have anything to do with the composer, from my point of view, anyway. It means
a person’s stopped living. It doesn’t have anything to do with music. […] I
think that one of the big problems we live with is that that kind of repetition
is everywhere, in advertising, in public address systems, and in politicians
always saying the same thing. We live in a minimalist world, I feel.
Here it is “worth
pointing out” that Carter was born in 1908, hence in the same decade as both
Lambert and Adorno, such that he, like them, was “present at the creation” of
the musical noise-pollution industry, and that although he spoke these words in
2003 (specifically to Geoffrey Norris in a newspaper interview), it is
reasonable to suppose that he conceived of “the minimalist world” as having
come into being not with the premiere of “the first minimalist composition to
make a significant impact on the public consciousness,” Terry Riley’s In C, in 1964, but in his own youth,
with the advent of the aforesaid industry and the attendant loudspeaker-mediated
incessant musical din so stridently decried by Lambert (for a “public address
system” is of course but a localized network of loudspeakers). And had Lambert
lived to hear In C and its hundreds
of “classical”-chart topping successors by Riley, Philip Glass, and John Adams,
he would doubtless have regarded minimalism as an unsurprising outcome of the
reinforcement of the late Romantic and neoclassical predilection for
anachronistic repetition by two further generations of universally enforced
radio and gramophone-listening. (As for
Adorno, although he lived a further half-decade after the premiere of In C, he presumably regarded whatever
minimalist compositions he could not avoid encountering as beneath his notice,
for short of a complete revolution in his understanding of music, he could not
but have despised minimalism, and we know he underwent no such revolution
because he is on record as denouncing rock music [whose massive popularity in
his target pedagogical demographic prevented him from ignoring it], a form or
style united with minimalism in [so the rabid Adorno fan Glenn Gould in 1981]
its “deadly dull…exploit[ation of] one beat that goes on and on and on
indefinitely.”) For Lambert alighted on
the remarkable discovery—a discovery disclosed quite early on in Music Ho!—that to write music “that has
something to do with music” it does not suffice “to write one bar and not
repeat it again,” for in merely doing that one willy-nilly repeats what others
have already composed, exactly in the manner of a twentieth-century would-be
Columbus or Magellan who set out to explore the world just as his fifteenth and
sixteenth-century predecessors had done—i.e., pointing a ship in some randomly
chosen direction:
There is an
obvious end to the amount of purely physical experiment in music, just as there
is an obvious end to geographical exploration. Wyndham Lewis has pointed out
[where?] that when speed and familiarity have reduced travelling in space to
the level of the humdrum those in search of the exotic will have to travel in
time, and this is what has already happened in music. The Impressionist composers
vastly speeded up the facilities for space travel in music, exploring the
remotest jungles and treating uncharted seas though they were the Serpentine
[in London’s Hyde Park]. Stravinsky, at one time the globe trotter par
excellence can no longer thrill us with his traveller’s tales of the primitive
steppe and has, quite logically, taken to time travelling instead. He reminds
one of the character in a play by Evreinoff [Who he?] who lives half in the
eighteenth century, half in the present.
I was both
thrilled and crestfallen when I read this passage for the first time—thrilled
because it was and is so impressively spot-on, and crestfallen because the
conceit propounded therein was one that I had long before come up with on my
own—and thereby proved its unsurprising applicability, mutatis mutandis, to other arts than music. Adorno did not alight on the cartographical conceit,
but although in 1933 he was still championing Schoenberg and his pupils as
genuinely progressive figures, by 1953 he had like Lambert tentatively arrived
at the conclusion that nothing wholly and essentially new remained to be done
in music: “The suspicion is justified that [the pianist and fellow-advocate of
the Second Viennese School] Edward Steuermann once expressed, namely that
music, at least great music, whose concept extends from Bach via Beethoven to
Schoenberg, is a transient category, bound up with the bourgeois era and fated
to be forgotten.” To be sure, Adorno continued to take an interest in
contemporary music and developed a particularly keen enthusiasm for the works
of Pierre Boulez, but on the whole he regarded the most supposedly advanced
composers of his last two decades, the so-called total serialists, as mere
epigones of the most near-totally serial-minded mind of the Second Viennese
School, Anton Webern. And his consignment of all of “music, at least great music” to the bourgeois era naturally
recalls Lambert’s consignment of sonata form to the aristocratic one with the
difference that it is at least “arguably” correct, as the Second World War
“arguably” dealt the coup de grace to the bourgeois era that had received a
near-fatal body-blow in the First, even though as perceptive a cultural critic
as Jean Amery would go on describing the present as “late bourgeois” into the
early 1970s. In any case, by the early 1950s, the neoclassicists had vanished
from the time-traveling musical circuit (Stravinsky himself having meanwhile
become a late-life convert to Schoenberg’s method), leaving in their place the
latest generation of jazz musicians: “It [i.e., the fated oblivion of great
music]” continues Adorno immediately after the just-quoted one,
is not unlike the
way a jazz athlete, highly qualified in his particular specialty, who already
finds it impossible what was actually at stake, rejects serious music as corny, as an old-fashioned mixture of
naiveté and affectation, and at the same time—having long since ceased to be
content with pride at his own ignorance—goes so far as to declare himself an
adherent of that music in the name of the Weltgeist.
This
characterization of the jazz musician qua exponent of regressive music who
fancies himself in the post-vanguard of the great tradition anticipates Chuck
Berry’s 1956 autogenealogy of himself and his own songs in “Roll Over Beethoven,”
and when rock ‘n’ roll morphed into its much more pretentious instar, rock tout
court, pop musicians’ will to disparage the “corniness” of traditional serious
music while demonstrating their mastery of it became much more flagrant. No
popster’s claim to deserve to be recognized as a “serious artist” is complete
absent the release of a record featuring an ineptly arranged wash of orchestral
strings, but in the “video” for the recording, the audio for these strings is
invariably synched with manifestly fresh-off-the-reel footage of toothless octogenarian
violinists in tie-and-tails. And although pop’s technical stock in trade has
not changed an iota since “Roll Over Beethoven,” few if any of the thousands of
spin-off styles and genres of pop that have appeared in the past six
decades--from funk to rap to speed metal to techno to grime--have failed to
pass themselves off as “groundbreaking” or “revolutionary” developments “in
music” (not just pop music, all music), a tendency whose wearisome apparent
interminability eventually prompted me to apply my then-newly discovered (or as
I then thought, invented) cartographical conceit by privately likening the more
recent of these self-off-passings to “the umpteenth discovery of Poughkeepsie.”
But enough about me, and indeed about Lambert and Adorno qua fellow-disparagers
of the music of their time, for even more interesting than their concurrence
that the current state of music (give or take twenty years) was parlously
moribund is their divergence regarding the best means of addressing and
rectifying this state. Adorno was neither slow to propose such a means nor
brief in expatiating on it, but the terms of his expatiation were unhappily
(some would naturally say “conveniently”) so tentative and vague that one—not
only I, but many another reader including Richard Leppert, the editor of a
collection of Essays on Music by
TWA—is stumped to imagine what form the means in question might actually take.
But perhaps this de facto formlessness is “no accident,” for Adorno dubbed this
prospective post-bourgeois musique
informelle, “informelle” being not the French equivalent of the English informal (although as we shall very
shortly see, Adorno doubtless wished it to carry overtones of that word) but a
neologism, the negation of formelle,
a word that Cassell’s French Dictionary
(first published in 1972 last revised in 1981, and hence a more reliable source
on a septuagenarian word than the latest Larousse) renders as “formal, express,
precise, plain, explicit.” So this is clearly (and plainly and precisely, if
not necessarily formally, expressly, or explicitly) a case in which “a bug is a
feature”: an authentic musique informelle
would be informal, not definitely stated (or prepared slowly), vague, imprecise,
and implicit, and such indeed is the impression of it given in closest approach
to a definition of it:
What is meant is
a type of music which has discarded all forms which are external or abstract or
which confront it in an inflexible way. At the same time, although such music
should be completely free of anything irreducibly alien to itself or
superimposed on it, it should nevertheless constitute itself in an objectively
compelling way, in the musical substance itself, and not in terms of musical
laws. (tr. Susan Gillespie)
“Ironically,”
whenever I try to picture this type of music in action or “praxis,” I
inevitably find it hard not to think of it as some kind of revival of Musikantenmusik or Gebrauchsmusik, as some lone fiddler “striking up a tune” or gaggle
of musically untrained people launching into song at the prompting of some contingent
and fleeting stimulus. And I suppose it is possible that Adorno himself
imagined musique informelle as just
that, inasmuch as he tendered a codicil to the definition that is tailor-made
for inoculating any such revival against kitschy anachronism: “Musique informelle is not cultural
neutralism, but a critique of the past.” A latter-day Musikant who was also a practitioner of musique informelle would evade kitschy anachronism because whatever
he happened to play, it would definitely not be an old tune presented to his
listener’s ears as if it had been made up on the spot or written literally only
yesterday. It might, rather, take the form—excuse me, unform—excuse me, inform—of,
say, the opening four-note motif of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, but of that
motif as played an allusion elicited by the exigencies of a quotidian
moment—say, the ringing of a telephone in the familiar (or once familiar)
rhythm of a whole notes alternating with dotted whole rests (or in the UK,
double quarter notes alternating with dotted half notes). On hearing the
ring-tone, the phone’s owner (a non-musician) might say to a friend in the same
room before answering the call, “It’s like fate knocking at the door,” thereby
prompting the friend qua latter-day Musikant
to say, “But if it were really fate knocking at the door, wouldn’t it sound
like this?” then pick up his violin and play the opening notes of the Fifth (perchance
much to the consternation of the call-taker who by then has answered the call
and is trying to listen to the party at the other end [who, perchance, in a
delicious instance of “the irony fate,” is delivering to him some fatefully or
fatally bad news]). As to why I can’t seem
to think of musique informelle’s
taking any other form than latter-day
Musikantschaft, this may simply be owing
to some contingent personal defect of my imagination, a defect that is
preventing me from conceiving of a version of music-production that is
eminently feasible, or it may very well be that my imagination is onto
something, that it has correctly intuited the practical or logistical
impossibility, even in the most utopian future post-bourgeois society—a society
in which “the realm of freedom” had been completely “wrested from the realm of
necessity” (to cite the definition of the telos of Marxism formulated by the as-of-this-writing [Halloween
2024]-properly-late [i.e., per my “Glossary of Solecisms and Barbarisms,” as
opposed to long dead and therefore not properly late] self-styled Marxist
Frederic Jameson)—of regularly and reliably producing music in the absence of
the imposition of formal constraints that would perforce compromise the
produced music qua “critique of the past.” Certainly the only extant approach
to a counterexample that springs to mind, that of the practice of John Cage,
does not seem quite to fit the bill because although its hospitability to
randomness and contingency is certainly inimical to formality, its exiguousness
of input from the composer calls into question its very actuality as a
form—excuse me, inform—of composing, and its relation to the past is not so
much one of critique as of indiscriminate assault (Elliott Carter likened it to
the desire to burn down an opera house, perhaps partly in allusion to the
resemblance of Cage qua showman to Wagner the one-time meta-theatrical arsonist),
and in any case Adorno himself was aware of Cage and although he praised his
work’s “polemical meaning,” and asserted that his “contribution [could] not be
exaggerated,” he stopped well short of anointing him as the world’s first
practitioner of musique informelle.
Perhaps certain works of electronic music would have satisfied him. I am
thinking here of Pousseur’s Jeu de
miroirs de Votre Faust, which in a long episode dominated by taped soprano
voice and piano traverses the entire history of Western music in a manner
reminiscent of Joyce’s traversal of literary history in the hospital episode of
Joyce’s Ulysses (and hence inexorably
functions as a form of music criticism as the other episode functions as a form
of literary criticism). Jeu de miroirs
dates from 1967, so Adorno might just have had a chance to hear it, and he does
in fact mention Pousseur approvingly in the essay in which he formulates the
principle of musique informelle,
albeit without citing a specific work (and as that essay dates from before 1967
he could not have been thinking specifically of Jeu de miroirs).
In any case, what is essentially in point
here is not what would have pleased Adorno but what approach to
music-production might have most effectually resolved the problem of
musical-topographical exhaustion (or may have already resolved it or may yet
resolve it). So let us take a look at Lambert’s suggestions regarding such an
approach—or, rather, “prescriptions” regarding it, for that unlike Adorno he has
quite definite notions of the sort of approach to take can be readily seen (as
I mentioned before) in his titling of the pertinent chapter “Sibelius and the Music
of the Future.” Of course from this title it can also readily be seen (as I
also mentioned before) that the prescription boils down to an adjuration to
future composers to imitate Sibelius, and I must needs admit that when I found
him yoking Sibelius’s name with futurity so explicitly in that title I both saw
at least a mild shade of red and felt an eyebrow (specifically and perhaps
felicitously my left one, as my right one is almost paralytically incapable of
solitary motion) jerk skeptically upward. For after all, I had never seen
Sibelius presented as a “progressive” composer by even his most dedicated admirers
and ardent propagandists (who were at least legionesque among Lambert’s
contemporaries-cum-colleagues in the Anglosphere, to Adorno’s intense
irritation [but in bringing Adorno back in I am getting a little ahead of
myself]). Indeed, I had read somewhere or other that within his lifetime
Sibelius was widely regarded (to his own Adorno-esque intense irritation) as
the immediate successor to Tchaikovsky as a symphonist, and so given that
Lambert regarded Tchaikovsky as an exponent of “the typical nineteenth-century
symphony” it was surprising (and remains bemusing [for Lambert never registers
any awareness of the genealogy linking the two composers, let alone makes any
effort to refute it]) that he also apparently regarded Sibelius as an exponent
of a kind of symphony that ought to serve as a model for the typical
twentieth-century one. But as it turns
out, chez Lambert there is no
contradiction between the notion of Sibelius as a non-progressive and Sibelius
as pioneer or pathbreaker because Lambert does not regard him as the founder of
an entirely new method of composition à la Schoenberg. Mind you, I myself have never found the
comparison to Tchaikovsky particularly apt; indeed, to my ears there is only
one episode in all of Sibelius’s symphonic output—which I have at least
technically aurally surveyed (i.e., been in aural proximity to a loudspeaker
through which it has streamed) in its entirety dozens of times over—that might
actually be mistaken for something by Tchaikovsky—viz., the impossibly treacly
principal melody of the finale of the Second Symphony, which really does sound
(at least to my ears) like the lyrical second subject from the first movement
of Tchaikovsky’s Sixth on saccharine-coated estrogen pills. Still, it is true
that (at least to my ears) Sibelius could never be mistaken for the kind of
twentieth-century composer whom Adorno termed (naturally disparagingly)
“moderately modern,” a composer like Prokofiev or Shostakovich or Hindemith or
the later Bartók who, while never making the leap into full-blown atonality,
wrote in a style-cum-idiom that would have been found unthinkably chromatic and
dissonant in the late nineteenth century. And yet again, he is not a
twentieth-century composer who, like Elgar or Zemlinsky (Adorno is doubtless turning
in his grave at my mentioning these two in the same typographical breath),
sounds pretty much like a classic late Romantic or post-Romantic who overstayed
his historical welcome by a few decades. In short, Jeanny S. is quite “a tough
nut to crack,” in the words of Glenn Gould apropos of himself in one of his
self-interviews. And speaking of Gould, it is “worth pointing out” that he was
an ardent Sibeliusian (I defy you to take a crack at the tough nut of
pronouncing that word, DGR), indeed, so ardent a one that he used the last few
minutes of S.’s Fifth as the soundtrack of the conclusion of his radio
documentary The Idea of North by way
of underscoring the implicitly normative narrator’s presentation of northern
Canada as a William Jamesian alternative to war-cum-Rodenberrian final
frontier. It is “worth pointing this out” because Gould was also an ardent
Adornian (even if his Adorno-fandom seems to have been built on a much
slenderer foundation than his Sibelius-fandom—viz., the collection of essays
known in English as Prisms). And so he
was perforce a champion of Adorno’s “perennial criteria of musical quality from
Bach to Schoenberg”—the qualities of “evocativeness, of articulateness, of
oneness in multifariousness, of diversity in unity.” Indeed, he could be said
to have been “more royalist than the king” in his prizing of these qualities, inasmuch
as while Adorno did seek and find “articulateness,” “oneness in
multifariousness” and “diversity and unity” principally in the-quality-composers-from-Bach-to-Schoenberg’s
contrapuntal passages and consistently treated contrapuntal’s antonym homophonic
almost as a dirty word, he never went so far, as Gould once (i.e., in his
interview with Tim Page regarding his 1981 recording of Bach’s Goldberg Variations) did, as to declare
that “all of the music that really interested” him (“not just some of it, all
of it”) was “contrapuntal in nature.” And yet, wie gesagt, Gould was an ardent admirer of Sibelius, the scourge of
Adorno’s master-criteria (at least according to Adorno). So what gave or gives? Why, evidently, either
that Sibelius’s music actually abounds in “articulateness,” “oneness in
multifariousness” and “diversity in unity,” and that Adorno failed to see (or
hear) this, or that S.’s music is as exiguous in these qualities as Adorno
supposed and Gould enjoyed S.’s music as a so-called guilty pleasure rather
than taking a “real interest in it.” Or, just possibly, that S.’s music abounds
in a kind or kinds of “articulateness,” “oneness in multifariousness,” or
“diversity in unity” that operate or operates independently of counterpoint and
that Adorno overlooked this abundance while Gould “felt it in his bones” (as
Gould said he expected the listener to feel his own highly articulated
treatment of tempo in relation to meter in the 1981 Goldbergs), and that this abundance on its own was good enough for
Gould whatever he might have claimed about the monopolization of his interest
by counterpoint. Or, just barely possibly, that S.’s music, while being markedly
deficient in “articulateness,” “oneness in multifariousness” and “diversity in
unity” makes up for this deficiency by being more “evocative” than Adorno gave it
credit for being and that this evocativeness on its own was good enough for
Gould whatever he might have claimed about the monopolization of his interest
by counterpoint. For my part, before reading Lambert’s chapter on him (to which
I swear we will return shortly, DGR),
by which point I had completed most of the abovementioned several-dozen aural
surveys of the symphonies, I found myself unbudgeably on Adorno’s side and
hence utterly unable to bring myself over to Gould’s, and indeed, I not only
found Sibelius’s music lacking in the meritorious qualities specified in
general terms by Adorno but also positively abounding in the bad ones specified
by him in more particular terms in the following passage:
In
isolation everything sounds workaday and familiar. The motifs are fragments of
the lingua franca of tonality. But they are combined into a meaningless nexus:
it is as if nouns like filling station,
lunch, death, Greta, and ploughshare are being indiscriminately
coupled with verbs and particles. An incomprehensible whole assembled out of
the most trivial details produces a mirage of the unfathomable.
A good example of such a “meaningless
nexus” is (and in writing in the present tense as I cannot honestly avoid doing
I am obviously letting at least three-quarters of the cat out of the bag
regarding my view of the degree of persuasiveness of Lambert’s argument) the
abovementioned conclusion of the Fifth Symphony. It begins with an episode melodically
dominated by a rhythmically unvarying motif oscillating repeatedly between
upward movement by the interval of a fifth and downward movement by the
interval of a third. There is scarcely a more familiar vocable of “the lingua
franca of tonality” than such oscillation along these intervals: it is exactly
the kind of thing a toddler produces the first time he is placed in front of a
piano keyboard in a calm enough mood to pick out individual notes with one
finger instead of pounding out Ivesian tone clusters with his fists. And of
course “there is nothing wrong” with starting out with such primevally familiar
material just as there is nothing wrong with starting work on a sentence with the determination that it is
going to include a primevally familiar word like “lunch” or “death.” But
Sibelius simply repeats the oscillation over and over again (yes, Glenn, just
like one of your accursed minimalists or rock musicians [speaking of whom it is
comically telling that the online reference work of first resort both cites ten
occurrences of the motif in pop songs and acknowledges that it cannot
distinguish between the ones that are quotations and the ones that are merely
coincidental]) for a minute or two and then abruptly drops the motif, whereupon
the symphony concludes with an ordinary V-I cadence in quarter notes—but one
whose V part is apportioned among a half-dozen or so of those notes punctuated
by rests of equal or greater length, so that the first-time listener is left in
suspense as to when and whether the tonic chord will ever drop. The effect is
rather like—nay, exactly like—listening
in on a dog being repeatedly being told “wait for it” by his owner before
finally being given the password that permits him to open his jaws to receive
the long-withheld mini-biscuit. It is also more broadly reminiscent of the
codas of Haydn’s “Joke” quartet and Beethoven’s Eighth Symphony, but unlike
these it fails to “land,” as one says of punchlines nowadays, because the
aforementioned several minutes of bi-intervallic oscillation were manifestly un-jocular
in tone and momentum (the online reference work of first resort claims that it
is an imitation of the horn call of Thor, surely the least humorous, the most
po-faced, of pagan gods—but one doesn’t need to be aware of the allusion [as I
was not until more than figuratively yesterday as of this writing {Guy Fawkes
Boxing Day 2024}] to be incapable of construing it as comical). In short, it is
in a more than figurative sense a non-sequitur. Presumably Adorno was hinting
at this quality of the abrupt illogical juxtaposition of different registers in
including both a quasi-archaism like ploughshares
and an ultra-modernism like filling-station
in his catalogue of nouns. I grant that not every movement of every one of
Sibelius’s symphonies is as flagrantly irrational as the finale of the Fifth.
But almost wherever I do not hear irrationality, I hear vacuity: “There’s no
there there.” Take the opening movement of the Fourth: it is celebrated by
Sibeliusians as the great musical
embodiment of the spirit of tragedy. To my ears it embodies nothing but a sort
of querulous inertia. “Don’t get me wrong here”; don’t mistake my
dissatisfaction for mere impatience,
the manifestation of an incorrigible “short attention span,” for I dare say no listener
appreciates a truly mahoosive
symphonic adagio—say, the third movement of Bruckner’s or the first of
Shostakovich’s Eighth, each of which dwarfs the first of Sibelius’s Fourth in
duration—more than I do. But in these music-modules there is always something happening at however glacial a
pace; at every moment of them an argument is audibly in the midst of being
propounded, at every moment of them something is on its way to reaching or becoming
something else, whereas a Sibelius movement always seems to be merely marking
time and treading water in pseudo-preparation for its arbitrary lurch into the
next episode of special effect-mongering. And of course from my couching of
this description in the present tense, the reader will have gathered that for
all its amplitude, Lambert’s chapter on Sibelius did not succeed at persuading
me that this seeming was after all mere semblance, that there was after all a
there somewhere in the roughly 200 minutes comprising the famous Finn’s symphonic
output; and indeed on the whole the chapter struck me as a perfect analogue or
counterpart of my established conception of the typical Sibelius work, for for
the most part the chapter is just “one damn thing after another,” which is to
say that for the most part Lambert contents himself with simply providing a
sort of play-by-play description of all the episodes of all of the symphonies,
together those of the two well-known tone poems, Finlandia and Tapiola, in
chronological sequence. I say “for the most part” because I can recall exactly
two passages in which he does something different—and I freely concede to his
credit (at least according to the standards of my personal credit-rating agency) that the
something-different done at the first of these points has effected a
modification of my appraisal of Sibelius in the composer’s favor, albeit one
too slight and localized to have been worth incorporating into the just-tendered
summary of that appraisal; and that the something-different done at the second
of them has offered at least the remote prospect of a more substantial, less
localized favorable modification thereof. The first passage occurs in the
discussion of the first movement of the Second Symphony:
The
exposition of this particular movement, a string of apparently loosely knit
episodes, is completely incomprehensible at first hearing, and it is only
towards the end of the development and in the curiously telescoped
recapitulation that the full significance of the opening theme becomes
apparent. Instead of being presented with a fait accompli of a theme that is
then analyzed and developed in fragments, we are presented with several
enigmatic fragments that only become a fait accompli on the final page. It is
like watching a sculptured head being built up from the armature with little
pellets of clay, or to put it more vulgarly, it is like a detective story in
which the reader does not know until the final chapter whether the blotting
paper or the ashtray throws more light on the discovery of the corpse in the
library.
This passage—or at least everything in it up to the word
“clay”—made me eager to revisit (or re-re-re-visit) the Second because it
suggested (and still suggests) that in its first movement Sibelius was engaged
in quite an innovative and compelling formal treatment of thematic material for
which I could think a precedent only in the finale of the card-carrying
maverick Charles Ives’s Orchestral Set No. 2, composed many years after
Sibelius’s number-sake (such that, of course, if the parallel proved as close as
this passage suggested, the laurels for innovation would have to be removed
from Chuck’s semi-bald head and placed on Jean’s fully bald one). In Ives’s
work the fragments that only gradually become a “fait accompli” are those of
the hymn-tune “The Sweet By and By,” and they are presented over the course a
multi-minute crescendo in which one hears them in rondo-like fashion
interspersed with material foreign to the tune before the melody is finally
blared out in full by the orchestral tutti, such that the effect is, yes, like
a sculpture being assembled from little bits of clay, but also like an intrinsically
effortful and repeatedly frustrated struggle to attain a clear-cut and
irrevocable result like reaching the top of the Jeffersonian hill, such that and
the instant intelligibility of the melody--even to someone hearing it for the
first time—owing to its square-built phrasing and harmony leaves the listener
no room to doubt that he is beholding a fully sculptured head. In short, Ives
employs this new treatment of thematic material in a way that is highly
dramatic, and this is “worth pointing out” because it may ultimately serve to
absolve Sibelius of at least some of the blame for my disappointment in it during
my post-Lambert revisitation. For on reading the Lambert I could not help
expecting the Sibelius to be as dramatic in pacing as the Ives; I could not but
expect the revelation of Sibelius’s fait accompli to be quite a viscerally
imposing moment by comparison with the moments of its preparation. I did not
realize that the comparison of the listening-experience to the viewing of a
sculpture being shaped was to be taken in a phenomenologically exact sense and
that listening to the movement would feel less like watching a play than (to
employ Gene Hackman’s famous simile for the spectation of a Rohmer film [not
that Rohmer is in any sense a cinematic analogue to Sibelius]) “watching paint
dry,” for the fait turns out to be quite a niggling little tune and it is
revealed with absolutely no fanfare (pun intended inasmuch as the revelation is
not preceded by the horn-call of Thor or any other sort of tucket or sennet)
and in dynamics that I assume are mezzo-forte at the loudest. Not that
Lambert’s conceit of the sculpture is entirely ill-founded, inasmuch as the
movement’s principal theme is indeed assembled out of smaller parts, but it is
deeply misleading, inasmuch as the parts are far fewer in number than those of
the clay pellets that would be required to produce a likeness of a human head
and do not interpenetrate in the organic yet striking way that those pellets
would be compelled to do. They are rather more like three or four cars of a
very primitive toy train that are easily distinguished from each other by shape
and color but not by function, and listening to the movement is rather like
watching a child toy with each of these cars in succession before joining them
together in a completely arbitrary order that is no more or less correct than
any of the sub-handful or double-handful of other possible permutations.
Lambert obviously gets closer to this characterization of the movement with his
second, more “vulgar,” detective-story conceit, but even here he misleads
because the fundamental distinction between the metaphor vehicles is not
between U and non-U, for of course the difference between a discovered objet
d’art and a discovery one makes at the end of a detective story is that even
after one has seen the object d’art assembled one takes pleasure and interest
in contemplating it, whereas once one has made the discovery in the story one
has no interest in re-seeing the objects that occasioned the discovery, or
indeed of ever reading the story again. And I certainly have no interest in
re-listening to Sibelius’s Second Symphony now that I know how the principal
theme of its first movement is put together (for the reader already knows in
what scant regard I hold the work’s finale), for all my interest has evaporated
with the (very faint) surprise of hearing that theme assembled for the first time,
just as my the interest in the punch-line coda of the finale of the Fifth has
evaporated now that I know how many times the V of tis final cadence is
repeated.
So on the whole, the first exceptional passage in Lambert’s
exposition of Sibelius isn’t quite so redemptive of the composer’s modus
operandi as I let on. Still, it provides evidence of Sibelius’s general use of
a certain approach that, if employed more deftly, à la Ives, may yield
compelling results and that I may just conceivably discover has yielded more compelling results
elsewhere in S.’s oeuvre if I will only listen through it more attentively yet
another time (as I am afraid I am not likely to do). As for the second passage,
it bids fair to be far more redemptive, and here it is:
Like the colour in a Cézanne
landscape, Sibelius’s orchestration is an integral part of the form. One might
almost describe it as having a kind of aural perspective, supplying a
contrapuntal element that is sometimes lacking in the music itself. Just as in
the polyphonic period a vertical section taken through the counterpoint
[presumably that of some Renaissance-Italian analogue of Sibelius, but who was
that?] often reveals harmonic combinations more remarkable than any of the
Monteverdi school of writers [as opposed to what other school of composition of
the seicento?], so in Sibelius’ symphonies a vertical section taken through the
orchestration often reveals a spacing of instruments more remarkable than
anything to be found in the impressionist school. But as in the case of the
polyphonic writers, this point of colour is the result of a logical development
of independent lines. It cannot be detached from its context and for this
reason Sibelius’ scoring does not lend itself to plagiarism as do Delius’s
harmony or Stravinsky’s rhythm.
The opening comparison—reaffirmed by explicit mention of the
impressionists as foils in the third sentence—is certainly both very arresting
and very promising, as one already knows exactly how Cézanne’s use of color
differs from that of his impressionist predecessors, and the mention of
perspective in particular calls to mind Cèzanne’s paintings of mountains
wherein thanks to the coloration it is always clear which portions of the
composition represent recesses in the montane rock and which portions represent
protuberances thereof. If Sibelius is indeed a full-fledged musical
post-impressionist at the level of orchestration, as this comparison all but
explicit says he is, he is already at least slightly more worthy of consideration
than Adorno supposes. The rest of the passage, if borne out by the music, would
make Sibelius into a figure whom Adorno would positively be obliged to admire qua
partial one-upper of his revered Second Viennese School. For this “vertical
section taken through the orchestration” suggests nothing less innovative than
a kind of “harmonization,” a transposition into the harmonic register, of Anton
Webern’s Klangfarbenmelodie, a melody
in which the change in instrumental timbre from note to note is as integral as
the change in pitch. A block of chords in which the fact that, say, a bassoon
rather than a tuba is playing the bass note and a piccolo rather than an
ocarina the highest pitch, and so on, is of important structural significance
certainly sounds interesting. The only trouble is that at least so far, I can
employ “sounds” here only in its non-aural, extended quasi-metaphorical sense,
as the construction of the described type is one that I cannot yet actually
hear with my ears in Sibelius’s music or even can yet imagine so hearing in any
music: like Schoenberg’s crabwise canons (for yes: we have at last arrived at
the abovementioned culminating moment) it would seem to be an effect that is
only perceptible via an ocular inspection of the score. And so one “circles
back” to the comparison to Cézanne only to find that it ineluctably forces one
back into the horizontal axis. For if the analogue to post-impressionist
painterly perspective really arises “from the development of independent
lines,” it cannot but be apprehensible solely through the ear’s tracking of
those lines over time just as visual perspective is apprehended via the eye’s
tracking of the transitions between colors in space. If perspective in
Sibelius’s music really functioned in this way, one would in listening to a
Sibelius symphony find oneself taking in several traditional Klangfarbenmelodien at once—to find one
line cycling through various sonorities while other lines above and below it in
average pitch cycled through a different succession of sonorities; to find, say
(and for madness-avoidance’s sake, confining ourselves to two lines), a
clarinet passage yielding to a flute passage and in turn to an oboe passage
while, say, a violin passage yielded to a viola passage and in turn to a cello
passage, and so on such that one heard a
transition between a succession of composite sonorities: clarinet-violin
followed by flute-viola, oboe-cello, and so on. But to the best of my imperfect
but by no means necessarily inadequate recollection (for instrumental color is
perhaps the element of music most readily imprinted on the memory and retained
thereby, and it is entirely fair to characterize in general terms an effect
that casts such a capacious net over a composer’s oeuvre as coloration does),
Sibelius’s orchestration does not work at all like this; rather, in his
symphonies, one tends to hear passages dominated or even monopolized across
horizontal lines by instruments of one family succeeding to passages dominated
or even monopolized across such lines by instruments of another family—to find passages
in the massed high strings followed by passages in the reeded-woodwinds followed
by passages in the horns, and so on. And if my ear has surmised correctly, then
it seems to me that Lambert’s case for Sibelius hasn’t got a load-bearing leg
to stand on, for he himself admits that it his music is “sometimes lacking in counterpoint,” i.e., utterly bereft of any
interaction between distinguishable melodic lines as opposed to thinly
possessed of relatively simple interaction between such lines, a quality that
one would describe as “rudimentarily contrapuntal”; and if Sibelius’s music is
in fact dominated by the kind of blocky orchestration that my mind’s ear
recollects, one would have to substitute “most often” for “sometimes” inasmuch
as such orchestration is impervious to contrapuntal treatment. “But you
yourself have admitted to being smitten with the music of Vaughan Williams,
which is likewise largely bereft of contrapuntal interest.” Yes, but as my
narrative account of his Sixth Vaughan has shown, Williams’s music compensates
for the lack of counterpoint (as for its primitive harmony) by abounding in
full-fledged, long-limbed melodies, and not even Lambert makes any bones about
the infrequency of proper melodies in Sibelius’s. “OK, but if Sibelius’s music
is such a contrapuntal desert as you have surmised it is, how did it ever
garner the admiration of Glenn Gould, who is on record as saying that ‘all the
music that really interests me is of a contrapuntal nature’?” Ah, for an answer
to that question we must at last turn to that Adorno-cited quality of evocativeness. For of all the qualities
TWA cites, evocativeness is the one most “arguably” extant solely in the ear of
the beholder. That which evokes a dung heap in my mind may for aught I know
evoke a bed of roses in yours, and while Sibelius’s music evoked nothing but “inarticulacy”
and “an inhibited promiscuity in the darkness” in Adorno’s mind (as in mine,
for that matter), in Gould’s it presumably evoked the frozen flatlands of
Finland, “the land of a thousand lakes,” qua sister realm of the Canadian
North, or else why would he have used the Fifth in the soundtrack of his
documentary? Mind you, I am not saying that evocativeness is entirely
subjective or that Sibelius’s music in particular is objectively entirely
unevocative of the lake-pitted Finnish flatlands; I am saying (or perhaps
merely conjecturing), rather, that the twentieth century saw the naissance and
crescence of a mass subjective craving for musical evocations of Scandinavian
landscapes, particularly among Anglo-Americans, and that Sibelius’s music
happened to be the only type of contemporary music that even came close to
being adequate to satisfying that craving. Of course there were other
Scandinavian composers around at the time—notably Gould’s cousin the Norwegian
Edvard Grieg and the Dane Carl Nielsen. But Grieg was essentially a
Scandinavian Dvorak (i.e., a Scandinavian poor man’s Brahms), such that he confined
his evocations of Scandinavia to the human
aspect of that region through the quotation and pseudo-quotation of
Scandinavian folksong in music that was otherwise indistinguishable from that
of a conservative German romantic. And as for Nielsen—why, he effectively
hamstrung himself even in being a Dane rather than a Finn or a Norwegian, for
in non-human geographical terms, Denmark is a cozy outcropping of the least climatically
forbidding part of Germany, the balmy grasslands of the north. And in any case,
Nielsen’s music is too ostentatiously feisty and dynamic to evoke the signature
Scandinavian trait of nearly inanimate inertness—not for nothing did he
subtitle his Fourth Symphony “The Inextinguishable” and his Second Symphony
“The Four Temperaments”—only one of which, the phlegmatic, is truly applicable
to the Scandinavians as pined for by people down under (i.e., all the
Anglophones, for even Anglophones of the northern hemisphere see themselves as
spiritual Australians by comparison with the Scandinavians–better tanned, more
physically active, more outspoken, etc.). So that left and leaves Sibelius by
default. (And yes, I know that the
Finns are by a certain definition not Scandinavian at all—i.e., because they
speak a language that is completely unrelated to Danish, Swedish, and
Norwegian. But to the fetishizers of the particular flavor of Scandinaviana now
in point, the Finns’ linguistic isolation makes them even more Scandinavian than the inhabitants of the other countries—i.e.,
more like unwilling transplants from some planet as arid scarce and flora and
fauna as the moon.) I repeat: I do not find Sibelius’s music evocative
of any place or thing in particular. But I am not a piner for Scandinaviana. If
I were such a piner, I might contrive to make myself find it evocative of
Scandinavia just as a piner for Italiana might contrive to transport himself
all the way to downtown Pisa or Florence on the wings of a whiff of oregano. It
is exactly like the recentish craze for “Scandy noir” detective shows. As far
as I am concerned the setting of a detective show in the uplands of Norway or
one of the three or four oversized fishing villages that pass for cities in
Sweden only makes it about ten times as boring as it would have been otherwise
(which would have already been intolerably boring as far as I am concerned),
but there are obviously millions of people who eat up such shows like
taffy-coated lutefisk—and more power to them/who am I to complain? Well, I am
obviously one to complain a great deal about it, but I am powerless to do
anything about it, for my discovery of Lambert’s enthronement of Sibelius as
the king of the realm of the “music of the future” in the teeth of his manifest
fatal defects has persuaded me that on such slight affective effects as those
produced by Sibelius’s music the better part of the world’s admiration of
aesthetic artifacts of all sorts hinges. That awful new argoteme vibes is really a much juster mot juste for the phenomenon than atmosphere or mood—for unlike these it conveys a sense of its slightness, its
exiguousness, its fugitiveness, its waywardness, and at the same time its
hypnotic rhetorical irresistibility. Once a certain composer, painter, poet,
novelist, filmmaker or genre or style of music, painting, poetry aut al &
c. has given you certain vibes, that
is enough to win you over to him or it for life. (And complementarily, to fill
out the schema in argotically correct terms, once such an entity has given you the ick, you will shun it like
the pest for life). And it now seems to me quite likely that vibes-infection
adequately accounts for most if not all of Lambert’s shortcomings as an
apologist for the music he loves-cum-polemicist against the music he hates. He
has not squared the circle of
meta-aesthetic rectitude of jazz for me because he has not recuperated the
manifest inadequacies of jazz’s harmonic pseudo-system, but he doubtless never
saw any need of recuperating that pseudo-system because the vibes he got from
jazz’s rhythmic tricks—together with its Anglophone vocals—sufficiently
redeemed it for him. “How ironic that having set out to reconcile Lambert with
Adorno, you have come to endorse an attitude to music espoused by a bugbear of
both of them—viz., Richard Wagner, namely, in his categorical rejection of
Mozart on the grounds that he could ‘hear the sound of crockery’ in it!” I do
not endorse the attitude; I merely regrettably acknowledge the objective force
of the phenomenon that gave (and continues) to give rise to it. Was mich betrifft, and essentially per
Adorno, one’s affective disposition to a given piece or body of music ought to
be traceable to objective qualities in the music, and that disposition should be
enriched and made more favorable as one discovers further objective qualities
in it or impoverished and made less favorable as one fails to find them
therein. But if one cannot find those qualities and at the same time finds
one’s affective attachment to the music undiminished, or one does find them yet
finds one’s affective revulsion from the music undiminished, one ought at least
to admit this—to admit that one likes it for unaccountable reasons, and Lambert
repeatedly apparently fails to tender such an admission (the hedge of
“apparently” being necessary because I obviously can never discern if his enthusiasm
or disdain is feigned rather than real). Such at least I hope I have done in my
account of my attitude to the music of Vaughan Williams: I acknowledge that I
love it despite its exiguousness of harmonic and contrapuntal interest, and
while I am willing to concede that this lingering love is a point in favor of
Lambert’s assertion of the primacy of melody, I am not willing to concede that
melody on its own is enough to carry a musical composition of substantial
dimensions—or, in more particularized terms, that a harmonically and
contrapuntally more involved Vaughan Williams would not have been at least a
modestly superior composer to the actual Vaughan Williams. “Fine, but what does it ultimately matter that
Lambert has turned out to be such a…how do you say…flake?” Flake, although
nearly as objectionable as vibes (although
for partly antithetical reasons, i.e., because it is an argoteme that seems to
have lost its currency since its
mid-1980s heyday [the non-antithetical part being that it seems ill-suited to
designating anyone not hailing from the west coast of North America {such
ill-suitedness being precisely what made Ronald Reagan’s application of it to
Moamar Khadafy so piquant}]), is probably just as juste a mot juste here as
vibes was above. For Lambert would
indeed seem to have flaked out on me;
i.e., failed to deliver on a promise out of sheer thoughtlessness and
flightiness. OK, so as I was saying, what does it matter that Lambert has
turned out to be such a flake? For fudge’s sake, the bloke’s been dead for
nearly three-quarters of a century and until three-quarters of a year ago you
hadn’t read a word he’d written and yet you’re acting as wobegonely wounded as
he if were your brother and had just eloped with your fiancée. Why should you
give a tinker’s toss that Lambert has turned out to be at bottom—or at least in
certain respects—yet another blustering unsystematic early twentieth-century
English music critic, and why do you instead give many a toss of Thor’s mighty hammer
about it?” Why, because, as I have already more or less stated, for all my
admiration of Adorno, I was hoping to find in Lambert proof that great music
had not effectively died out with the Second Viennese School in the middle of
the twentieth century. I was hoping to find something new “to listen for in
music” and to find that that something new was to be found in composers and
schools of composition that I had hitherto poo-pooed or neglected. And to be
sure, Lambert has afforded me
something at least slightly more valuable than a booby prize for my hopes—viz.,
a modicum of relief from the guilt (or, at any rate, the uneasiness) I had
always felt at listening for melody more than for any other musical attribute.
But on the whole he has merely reaffirmed or even fortified my original
prejudices—on the whole, he has made me admire Schoenberg and co. more and
Stravinsky and co. less and persuaded me that jazz and Sibelius are an even a
bigger waste of listening-time than I had previously supposed. “But have you
ever really believed that music
effectively died out with the Second Viennese School; or, to put it another
way, do you really never listen to
music written since the death of Schoenberg?” Not never but decidedly seldom—and
I can easily count the composers of that seldom-listened-to music on one hand. And
of this sub-handful I can in good faith call only two new favorites of mine
(which is essentially to say, composers who have reliably offered me something
new to listen for)—namely, Elliott Carter and Alfred Schnittke. As I have
already remarked in one of my essays comparing Glenn Gould and Charles Rosen,
Carter really did move beyond the Second Viennese School in a substantial way
via his technique of “metric modulation,” which transposed counterpoint into
the dimension of time by allowing separate musical lines to be treated as
discrete events generally occurring
at different speeds and only occasionally converging in tempo and thereby
giving a transitory impression of a single event (just as in traditional
counterpoint the lines move about in space in relation to each other and give
the impression of occupying a single space only at certain pivotal harmonic
moments). Still, although it undoubtedly makes for absorbing and super-dramatic
listening, Carter’s new counterpoint is after all still a form of counterpoint and therefore in “a certain real sense” more
of a refinement than an innovation, such that “in a certain real sense” our old
bugbear John Cage was very much onto something when he snidely described
Carter’s music as “adding another wing onto the academy.” As for Schnittke, he
was certainly not merely giving expression to personal megalomania when he said
that his technique of “polystylism [had] guided the musical avant-garde out of
its crisis,” because this technique, although superficially resembling that of
Stravinskyian neoclassicism, allowed him to deal with the problem of form in a
genuinely innovative way; namely, by treating the styles of entire musical
epochs and registers of taste in much the same way as earlier composers had
treated blocks of contrasting material within a style—such that, for example,
his string trio begins in a florid post-post romantic style reminiscent of
Berg, then passes into a sort of dessicated Schubertian early romanticism, and
concludes in a sort of infantilized version of the baroque contrapuntal style;
all of this adding up to an argument as coherent as any of those propounded by
any of the great symphonists from Haydn to Mahler. Still, there is no denying
that such a technique remains ineluctably retrospective and that the moral
inculcated by it is always the same—namely, to quote from memory (and therefore
regrettably not quite accurately in letter but, one hopes, accurately enough in
spirit) Schnittke’s pal and frequent premierer the violinist Gidon Kremer, “The
gestures associated with these forms and styles used to have meaning, and now
they don’t, and that’s why we’re in a mess.” “But” (by the way, this is your
friendly reader-stroke-interlocutor talking, not Mr. Kremer) “if this moral is
true, isn’t it worth inculcating, and perhaps even worth inculcating many times
over?” Yes, up to a point—I mean up to a certain historical point, beyond which the inculcation seems to become (or
perhaps even already to have begun to become) more and more nearly gratuitous.
After all, Schnittke was born in 1934, the year immediately after the
publication of Music Ho!, a year in
which, pace Lambert and per Adorno,
the old forms and styles had “arguably” just been given a new lease of life in
the Second Viennese School’s first decade of twelve-tone compositions; and when
Schoenberg died he was already seventeen years old, old enough to have grown up
taking that new lease of life for granted, such that his late-century
lamentations on the death of the old forms and styles can be taken as sincere outpourings
of grief of someone who was “present at the destruction.” But now, in 2024,
Schnittke himself been dead for more than a quarter-century and the moment of
the death of those old forms and styles has all but passed out of living
memory. We are now as temporally remote from Schoenberg’s last works as those
last works were from the middle-period works of Brahms and Tchaikovsky. One can
only live among ruins so long before they become one’s everyday household
furniture, just as can only full-throatedly bewail the passing of one’s youth
until early middle age. A “crisis in meaning” in music clearly supervened about
a century ago and has not since been resolved, but with each passing year it
becomes more and more debatable whether this crisis is in any sense or to any
degree our crisis and more and more defensible
to regard this crisis as “history” in the quasi-pejorative argotic sense. “So are you saying that now all’s right with
the world, such that we no longer need that angst-ridden music of the early mid-to-late
late twentieth century as a sort of shoulder to cry on—no, not a shoulder to
cry on, because that sounds more like something out of the sentimental
nineteenth century—say, a sort of fellow psychiatric patient to scream our
lungs out in company with?” By no means: to the contrary, I think that all is a
good deal wronger with the world than it was in the early mid-to-late twentieth
century. But I also find that not even the most angst-ridden music of the
twentieth century adequately conveys a sense of the wrongness, and I also
cannot conceive of a form of music—or, rather (because we must bear in mind
Adorno’s musique informelle as a
lingering potentiality, however feeble) a version
of music-production, that would adequately convey that sense. In other
words, I suspect that music qua conveyer of the current state of the Weltgeist may have had its day, that
contra Schoenberg, not only is “there no longer a good deal more music to be
composed in C major” but there is no longer the tiniest smattering more music
in any key or non-key to be composed. “So
what are composers to do now?” I don’t for the life of me know, and to be
perfectly candid and frank, for all my above verbal handwringing, it has since
occurred to me I don’t really care
whether any new Weltgeist-bearing
music is being composed now or will ever be composed again. Seriously, mate or
matess, what concern of it is it to me, a mere—mere in the sense of
“exclusive,” not in the sense of “humble” or “less important than the ‘artist’—listener-cum-student
whether it is composed or not? Certainly it would be nice to hear a work of
music that was new in the fullest chronological sense—i.e., not merely new to
my ears but new to the world altogether—that also seemed to be new in the
fullest weltgeisttragend sense, but I
am not going “to sleep an hour less or eat an ounce less meat” no matter how
long I go without hearing such a composition. And in more general terms, the
terms of the various current crises of all the arts from music to painting to “literary
fiction,” I think that one should seriously entertain the notion that the
crises are mere (mere not only in the sense of “exclusive” but also in the
sense of “humble” and “less important than just about everything else
imaginable”) epiphenomena of the death-throes of a racket—not a tennis racket,
mind you, but a mafia-style racket. Consider the current perpetuum mobile of novelists and would-be novelists’
kvetchfests about how the internet and so-called smart phone have “killed”
so-called literary fiction because nowadays a character in a novel could
instantly get out of any quandary by just ringing up someone or just googling
something. I suppose it’s more or less true (I concede through gritted teeth
qua militant and justified anti-Whig [i.e., inasmuch as while I find Google ever-more-woefully
inadequate for my own research purposes and hardly ever find myself in a
quandary from which a so-called landline phone would not have extricated me
just as serviceably as a so-called smart one (i.e., a quandary during which I
am not at home or within a very short walking distance of the sort of
establishment that used to afford access to a pay telephone), I realize that
the great mass of today’s mollycoddled hypochurls find both Google and
so-called smart phones super-adequate and super-indispensable, respectively])
that so-called “literary” fiction has been killed by that very duo of culprits,
and I suppose that because that is more or less true, more or less everyone who
has trained himself to write a novel is now out of a job, but so what? Does
anybody really need (“need” in the broadest sybaritic sense, of course, not in
the narrowest life-and-death one) to read books about nonexistent present-day people
trying to extricate themselves from nonexistent present-day problems? Would any
reader care a jot if such books
ceased to be written altogether? Or at any rate, would any decent reader, any reader who wasn’t an unregenerate turd, care a
jot about that (for I own that now as ever before a good chunk of even the
highest-browed reading public consists of people for whom a mirror-perfect
description of the quotidiana of a life exactly like their own in all its
external particulars is sufficiently gratifying [cf. the writer in Tarkovsky’s Stalker’s weary admission that he only
writes about his readers])? (While I am here, I might as well provide a specific example of such a kvetchfest—one
from a writer lamenting that one could never get away with writing the sort of
book that W.G. Sebald used to write, the sort thick with geographical
references that but very imperfectly “map onto” the real world; first because
every such reference would be instantly fact-checked and corrected by every
reader via a consultation of Google maps and related engines, and second,
because Google maps and related engines allowed every would-be reader to
explore “virtually” most of the sorts of places WGS had explored in person. But
to the first of these laments one might readily demur that Google maps etc.
have simply “raised the bar” for would-be Sebaldians, that they must now take
care to fact-check their points de repère
meticulously before committing them to paper [and as for the
counter-demurral that such a writer benefits “artistically” from being allowed
to bend or break the truth, I can only say that the for all the respectability,
nay venerability, of falsification, nobody has ever adduced a compelling argument
in defense of it—i.e., convincingly argued that inaccuracy qua inaccuracy
possesses intrinsic virtues or that caeteris
paribus an accurate account of the world is not always superior to an
inaccurate one.] And to the second of the laments one might readily demur that
the opportunity for “every man” to become “his own W.G. Sebald” in yet another
sense from the one I effectuated in my pastiche is a cause for rejoicing rather
than for repining. Seriously: if a “virtual” stroll through a train station in
a big continental-European city or along the High Street of a small English
seacoast town affords a present-day person the same kind of food for thought
that WGS found in actual flâneurie in
such places, who but a jobbing author qua jobbing author—i.e., a wisher for the
broadest possible range of readerly market niches--can sincerely regret this
rather than welcome it? “B-b-b-ut,” you pout-stammer, “if anyone can engage in such flâneurie
now, what is the point of writing a book prompted by the thoughts prompted by
such flâneurie?” Why, exactly as much
of a point, and exactly the same sort of point, as there has always been of writing a book prompted
by the thoughts prompted by geographically situated entities one has solely
encountered through books and other –i.e., a point that can range from “none
whatsoever” to “the most important point in the universe of significance”
depending on the nature and quality of the thoughts prompted by the virtual flâneurie. Of course, as for the portion
of the cachet of WGS-esque books derived from their arising from the presence
of “boots on the ground” in exactly two senses—i.e., that of the boots worn by
the flâneur as he strolls along the actual
High Street and that of the “Boots” in the sign in the window of that High-Street’s
chemist’s shop as he strolls past it—well, that is admittedly all foutu, history, “gone with the wind,”
etc. But to lament the obsolescence of that portion is simply and utterly perverse
inasmuch as the raison d’être and final cause of such boots-on-the-ground flâneurie
was or were always the nexus of thoughts arising from it rather than the
cash-making opportunities arising therefrom. Such a lament is as perverse as
would be a lament at the collapse of the crutch-making industry in consequence
of a plummet in the rates of leg injuries [and no, not on the eminently
defensible {if still highly debatable} grounds that “something has been is
lost” now that nobody can any longer know what it feels like to walk with the
aid of a crutch, but on the grounds that one has thereby been deprived of the
opportunity to make a killing in the crutch-making industry]. So “ironically,” however strongly I may have
soured on Lambert, I am going to have to give him the last word—albeit not his last word, the word in which he
buoyantly envisages a future teeming with latter-latter day Sibeliuses, but,
rather, the earlier-placed word of his above-quoted strictures on Hindemith’s Gebrauchsmusik qua gratuitous inventory
of shoddily made shoes (a metaphor that now strikes me as all-too “on the
nose,” for Lambert himself was after all by vocation first and foremost a
composer and hence doubtless all-too-readily inclined to think of music as a
shoe-like commodity [and hence further more desperately inclined to search for
a ‘music of the future’ into which to insinuate his own prospective
compositional trajectory, whereas Adorno, having thrown over his ambition to be
a composer donkey’s years before the Second Viennese School gave up the ghost,
was naturally warmer to the notion of a version of contemporary musical praxis
that transcended the traditional bounds of composition as a métier], although
he certainly deserves praise for behaving like an ethical artisan by refusing
to recommend shoddy goods merely in order to drum up custom for his trade en
bloc [when I search for a counterexample I immediately alight on one that
perhaps felicitously centers on producers of goods that are as intangible as
music: viz., that of university professors who publicly decry the governmental
underfunding of the very elementary and secondary-school teachers whom they
unreservedly sneer at amongst themselves]). We now have all the shoes we need
or will ever need, thank you very much, Mr. Composer. We have, withal, plenty
of specimens of every type of shoe-pair we will ever need—plenty of brogues,
plenty of slippers, plenty of pumps, plenty of clodhoppers, etc. (but gosh
forbid a single pair of sandals or flip-flops); which is to say, in literal
terms, plenty of specimens of every musical form and genre—plenty of
symphonies, plenty of concertos, plenty of song-cycles, plenty of string
quartets, etc. (but gosh forbid a single rock or hip-hop album). “Very well,
but in that case, we can only allow Lambert to have the penultimate word. For if you really believe that we have all the music we need, you are perforce
consigning all that music to a
museum—” –How I do wish that people
would stop rushing for the metaphor of the museum the moment anyone hints at
leaving something as it is for a millisecond or two instead of adding onto it
like gangbusters and with hammer and tongs; or at least that they would stop
employing the metaphor in an attitude oozing with “certainty that you will
approve” their disdain for museums, as if a museum were the most nauseating
sort of place in the world not barring an unventilated field latrine. Remember: I am approaching this entire problem
or question from the point of view (and ear) not of a composer but of a listener, such that as far as I (and
you, DGR, whom I am by default interpellating as a non-composer) am concerned,
turning the omnium of music in question would simply mean putting it all in one
place, a place in which into which it has “arguably” already been put by
generations of reference works, and a place into which some super-rare bird of
a genuinely innovative composition could conceivably be introduced every now
and then (i.e., inasmuch as actual museums occasionally make adjustments to
their fixed exhibitions). But in any case, the purpose or function that I am
envisaging for this omnium is less nearly akin to that of a museum than to that
of a school of martial arts, which is to say that I am envisaging it as a body
of knowledge which, although it is of ancient origin and has not been recently
augmented, continues to provide living people with certain (as in both particular and sure) means of dealing with the situations that life throws at them
(or throws them into, to get all Heideggerian about it). What I meantersay is
that just because the world has changed in certain non-superficial ways since
(say) Haydn’s and Beethoven’s and Brahms’s and Schoenberg’s respective times we
all can still benefit from an understanding of how each of these men dealt with
the world as it existed in each of those periods. “So each of us can learn what it was like to
compose a fugue or a sonata form movement in 1780 versus 1820 versus 1880
versus 1920?” No! Remember, I am
talking here about the experience of the listener, and of the listener qua not
mere culinary connoisseur of sound-painting but qua active cogitator about the
idea of the world conveyed by a given work of music. For example: Haydn’s music
conveys certain ideas about God, death, love, the human community, and so on
that are manifestly different from both Bach’s and Beethoven’s and even more
patently different from Brahms’s and Schoenberg’s, and by reflecting on these
ideas one can try them on for size, so to speak, and see how congruent they are
with one’s own ideas of the world—not only as it is now but also as it once was
and as it someday might be again. Consider the notion-cum-phenomenon of the
tragic as it expressed and articulated in two works separated from each other
by almost exactly two centuries, Haydn’s 49th Symphony and
Shostakovich’s 13th String Quartet. Both these works are thoroughly
tragic in tone and spirit from beginning to end. But it would obviously be very
wrong and indeed almost silly to say that the Haydn symphony anticipates the
tone and spirit of the Shostakovich quartet or that the tone and spirit of the
quartet echoes the tone and spirit of the symphony. Something obviously
happened to the tragic between 1770 and 1970, and it is none too difficult to
specify what happened to it—viz., that it ceased being noble and poised and
became hysterical and neurotic. But of course these words “hysterical” and
“neurotic” are themselves of nineteenth-century or early-twentieth century
origin and would have been unintelligible to a person of 1770, so then one has
to ask oneself “To what extent is this supervention of neurosis and hysteria
the effect of the composer’s experience, and of organic and permanent changes
in the general character of experience that took place between 1770 and 1970,
and to what extent is it the effect of some sort of ‘copy-cat’ phenomenon like
fashion that can be shaken off more easily?” Of course people will answer such
a question by outragedly yet exasperatedly pointing to the “the horrors and
atrocities of the twentieth century” or more specifically “the horrors and
atrocities of Russia under Stalin” as if that explained absolutely everything
when it in fact explains nothing because most people (including Shostakovich)
did not experience or witness most of those horrors and atrocities directly,
and by the same token Haydn did eventually experience or witness at least some
of the immediate consequences of events as violent as the French Revolution and
the Napoleonic Wars and yet failed to compose a work of the 1790s or
18-oughties that was nearly as tragic as his 49th Symphony. And as for us inhabitants of the 2020s, we are
“arguably” or “in a certain very real sense” more insulated from true horrors
and atrocities than both Haydn and Shostakovich; and by the same token we have
“arguably” or “in a certain very real sense” witnessed and experienced horrors
and atrocities whose horror and atrocity neither of those men could have
imagined. Hence the fact that Haydn still “speaks to us” to a certain degree
encouragingly suggests that we may yet be able to reclaim a sense of the tragic
that is not neurotic, while the fact that even Shostakovich’s sense of the
tragic can sometimes strike us as corny suggests that we may already be too far
gone to reclaim any sense of the
tragic, or at any rate a sense thereof that has not been vitiated by some force
even less wholesome than neuroticism. Only closer aural and intellectual
attention to the works and to their degree of correspondence with our
experience of the world in the broadest and most comprehensive sense will
perhaps—and yes, only perhaps—enable us to determine which of these suggestions
is well founded and approach that world accordingly. And so I am essentially
arguing that we should approach the entire established corpus of serious music in
the same attitude and spirit, and with the same aims and purpose, as those in
and which I long ago argued we should approach the combined literary corpus of
James Boswell and Samuel Johnson. Here of course the reader will demur that
applying such an approach to music will be infinitely more difficult and
perhaps even impossible owing to music’s being a non-verbal medium, but here,
as with his mistaking my advice to listeners for advice to composers, he will
be making a category error about the object and the nature of my counsel—for I
am not saying that one should write
about music in this manner (although even here I am strongly inclined to “deny
the reader’s major,” inasmuch as I suspect that a great deal of extant
worthwhile writing about music, including Lambert’s and Adorno’s has resulted
from the application of the indicated approach) but rather that one should think
and feel about it (and feel about in
it) therein; and doing this will entail nothing at all complicated or elusive.
Everyone who has spent any amount of time listening to music hailing from
mutually far-flung historical periods (‘Any
amount—say, 30 seconds?’ Obviously not, but I should think a few hundred
hours would suffice) knows that they express and articulate correspondingly
mutually far flung attitudes to the world, and the longer, more closely, and more
extensively one listens the better one will understand the differences between
such attitudes even if one never so much as dreams of writing a single sentence
about them.
THE END