Aesthetics and the
Christian Musician—part 2
Any philosophical view of aesthetics
that admits the grotesque or ugly is faulty.
We know that crude, ugly unmusical compositions do exist, but they are
the result of a misarrangement of the building blocks of music. Never blame God with ugly grotesque unmusical
compositions. The anti-music
compositions of the 20th century were not produced by God-fearing Christian
composers and arrangers.
Musique concrète is an example of
anti-music music composition. Pierre
Schaeffer (1910--1995) composed music directly on tapes or discs from natural
sources. However, these “natural sounds”
were seriously distorted by playing them backward, changing the speed of the
sound of by other editing abnormalities.
In 1948, Schaeffer composed his Concert des bruites (Concert of Noises)
and other original compositions. Pierre
Schaeffer’s music can be identified with the philosophy of surrealist painters
with its juxtaposition and chance techniques.
He often took perfectly natural sounds and scrambled them in an
indeterminable manner. (Surrealism will
be considered later in this discussion.)
Schaeffer, Henry, Baronnett and Boulez
were the early “inventors” of this anti-music distortion. These compositions included religious pieces
like Mass for Liverpool and The Apocalypse of John. So this distortion found its way into
religious genres making subtle mockery of the awesomeness and solemnity of
sacred symbols. One shocking aspect of
this distorted religious music is that the narration of the Bible text is
clearly understandable. John Cage (1912--1992)
became interested in anti-musical techniques like prepared piano and chance
operations. Cage called his chance music
indeterminacy.
Thought for the Day
Not
everything that God created was visually beautiful but it was all very good.
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