Music styles--part 2
One of the objectives of these posts on music styles is to apply music
philosophy to music praxis. Music
philosophy is actually only so much rhetoric until it is put into
practice. One’s music philosophy may
look excellent on paper, but unless it is applied to music “doing” it only
serves to ease a musician’s conscience.
It is one thing to say you believe something, but it is entirely another
to back it up by what we actually "do" when you music.
If the words of the songs we
sing unto God are completely biblical, then they embody truth. They represent absolute truth because their
message is absolute truth. They represent what Francis Schaeffer would call
“true truth”. If the words are congruent with biblical principles then it stands to
reason that the style of singing should also be congruent with the words
sung. the words and the music must send
the same message.
I Corinthians14:7-8 states, “And even things without life giving sound,
whether pipe or harp, except they give a distinction in the sounds, [melodies]
how shall it be known what is piped or harped?
For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to
the battle?” There is much deeper
musical truth in this Bible music reference than is commonly understood. When a
soloist’s vocal performance style allows scooping up to pitches, breathy
indiscriminate nonvocal sounds, delayed vibrato (or no vibrato), the result is
without doubt an “uncertain sound” vocally speaking. The vocal performance
style actually belies the constant truth of the message of Christ
crucified. So, when a vocalist
juxtaposes biblical “true truth” with a vocal performance style that is not
accurately in pitch, constant or aesthetically presented, then the musical
message, which affects the spiritual message, is greatly hindered, diluted and
therefore obscured.
Thought for the
day-styles-part 2
It is one thing to sing the song
"Give of your best to the master", but it is another thing to perfect
one's musical offering by careful vocal study.
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