Aesthetics and the Christian Musician—part 3
In 1952, Cage composed his ultimate
anti-musical composition, “4 minutes and 33 seconds”. After Cage, other composers began to use
chance operations which have been termed aleatoric i.e. like the throwing of
dice. This piece became the ultimate
composition of anti-music since his purpose was to compose music that said absolutely
NOTHING! The performer simply sat at the
piano for the designated period of time making absolutely no sounds.
At this point in the history of music,
so-called serious music composition had
philosophically destroyed an aesthetic of beauty and profundity in music. Cage had philosophically proved Stravinsky’s
antithesis philosophical statement, “I consider that music is, by its very
nature, essentially powerless to express anything at all...” , Wayne Bowman, Wayne.
Philosophical Perspectives on Music,
p.194 So the godless antithesis of depraved man in
the 20th century closed the door on a music aesthetic based on beauty and
musing with anti-music based on distortion and chance techniques.
These
composers opened the door for the lack-luster philosophy that the music part of
music is incapable of expressing any effective message or perhaps any message
at all. They also destroyed profundity
in music since chance music is just as profound as the most thought out
composition by great composers like J. S. Bach.
Now complete musical despair reigns.
To these composers music says nothing is incapable of being profound,
and is ultimately incapable of expressing anything at all.
Thought
for the Day
Although
beauty in the fine arts may differ somewhat, until the 20th century
aesthetic ethics always considered music in terms of the beautiful.
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