Thinking Musically 1 - Wade
Thinking Musically 1 - Wade
Thinking Musically 1 - Wade
k i n k i n g
A i u s i c & l l y
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EXPERIENCING
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N e w York Oxford
Oxford University Press
2004
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CHAPTER 1
T h i n k i n g
about
M u s i c
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If you can speak you can sing; if you can walk you can dance.
(Zimbabwean Shana proverb)
All over the world, people make music meaningful and useful in their lives.
That statement encapsulates much of what ethnomusicologists are interested in and offers a framing perspective for many ways of thinking
both about people and about music. In this chapter I shall explore each
word in the statement with two purposes in mind: to suggest new ways
you might think about music that you regularly hear, and to begin to
expand your musical horizon. Because this is a teaching book, I shall
also begin by speaking briefly about the transmission of music, the ways
it is taught and learned.
PEOPLE
Music Makers. Who makes music in our familiar world? Music makers are individuals and groups, adults and children, female and male,
amateurs and professionals. They are people who make music only for
themselves, such as shower singers or secretly-sing-along-with-theradio types, and they -are performers, people who make music purposefully for others. They are people who make music because they are
required to and people who do so simply from desire. Some music makers study seriously, while others are content to make music however
they can, without special effort.
To think about music makers globally, you might ask whether music makers are regarded in any particular way in a particular place. At
one end of a spectrum, some societies expect people who make music
to be specialists, born into the role or endowed with a special capacity.
2 s THINKING MUSICALLY
At the other end of that spectrum, in some societies it is assumed that
the practice of music is a human capacity and that all people will express themselves musically as a normal part of life.
Local terminology is a clue to the ideas held about music makers.
When you hear or use the word "musician," to what sort of music maker
are you referring? When I ask this question of students in my courses,
most reply with an impression clearly derived from the sphere of Western classical music. In this volume, however, I use the word musician
more generically, to cover all people who experience music as a practice (figure 1.1).
Many questions about musicians embed them in their musical context. Who makes music with whom? Who learns music from whom?
Who is permitted to be a teacher? Who can perform where? Who can
perform for whom? Is anyone prohibited from making some particular
type of music, and if so, why? Who plays which instrument, and why?
Do musicians have high cultural status (i.e., is their music making highly
valued by a group)? Do musicians have high social status (i.e., a high
ranking in the society)?
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6 b THINKING MUSICALLY
"music" is by no means universal. None of the hundreds of First Nation groups have a word for "music," for instance. It is not set apart as
a category; it is just there, and everyone participates in it. In India the
word for music, sangTta, is used to encompass dance as well as music.
In other places a word for "music" refers only to instrumental music.
In the Islamic worldview, the mellifluous recitation of the sacred Koran (CD track 1), which many non-Muslim listeners have called "music," is not considered musiqa; musiqa is a category encompassing genres (that is, types of music) associated with secular life. Clearly, just
because something sounds like music to me, I have no right to insist
that it is "music" to someone else. It is the local or even personal idea
that counts.
Christopher Small has taken the position that music is not a thing at
all, but an activity, something that people do, and ethnomusicologists
generally concur. He calls doing music "musicking": "to music is to take
part, in any capacity, in a musical performance, whether by performing, by listening, by rehearsing or practicing, by providing material for
performance (what is called composing), or by dancing" (1998: 9). He
sometimesand I always wouldextends musicking to all the activities about which I wrote above under "People."
Musical Values. If I, in my American culture, use the expression
"that's music to my ears," you will know that I have heard something I
want to hear, or in terms of sound, something beautiful. Ideas about
beauty are one aspect of a set of artistic values referred to as aesthetics
in this case, music aesthetics. Those ideas are not necessarily shared,
even within one society. A letter to an editor about Trinidadian steelband encapsulates the obvious fact that a beautiful sound to one person is abominable to another (CD track 2, figure 1.2):
Can beating is pan beating in any language and in any form. It does
nobody any good, and when it is indulged in all day all night, day in
and day out, it is abominable.... If it must continue and if by virtue
of its alleged inherent beauty and charm it will someday bring popularity and fame to the island and a fortune to the beaters, then by
all means let it go onbut in the forests and other desolate places.
(C. W. Clarke, Trinidad Guardian, 6 June 1946)
While individual ethnomusicologists have personal ideas about musical beauty in terms of the quality of the sound (timbre) that is cultivated, it is a tenet of our field that we will keep our ears and minds
open and respect the fact that many timbres are considered beautiful.
FIGURE 1.2- Steeldrum. On left, Tom Miller, tenor pan. On right, Alan Lightner, double seconds/pan. (Photo by Kathleen Kara)
8 &
THINKING MUSICALLY
or ifalue
FIGURE 1.3 Salsa drummers. From left to right: on bongo, Shannon Dudley; on
timbal, Greg Campbell; on conga, Marisol Berrios. (Courtesy of Marisol Berrios)
volved in most popular music permits artists the freedom to render a
piece in very distinctive ways.
Aesthetic ideas have a great deal to do with the nature of the musical content, and those same ideas might obtain in dance as well- In West
African traditions, short segments (facets) are highly valued: Kpelle
dance movements consist of short, quick, tightly orchestrated steps, for
instance. In much African clrurruning, short rhythmic patterns are repeated in close coordination with other short rhythmic patterns, as an
example from CD track 5 demonstrates. It is the process of interlocking
the short segments that creates "the music"; the musical experience is
a social experience. If, as in Christopher Small's terms, musicking ar-
tf"
Student Lucia Conines: "I feel that the youth in my community are drawn to this music [reggae] and culture because
it is liberating. We are about to inherit this monster that is
our societyincluding the government, the educational system, the work force, the media, the capitalist philosophy, the
technology, the developed civilization, the destruction of the
earth, the inequatity, the separating illusions of racism, sexism, ageism, homophobia, etc. and the list goes onI often
find this overwhelming, confusing, and terrifying. When the
communities at home and at school are not strong or secure,
p
10 =* THINKING MUSICALLY
we yearn for another place that speaks to us deeply, a place
that brings us to a higher consciousness. Reggae culture provides this for manya place where people are brought together through music, music coming from the heart, speaking
to the power of the people, music that is alive and encouraging, fulfilling and in the spirit of celebration" (2001).
Student Aron: "There is another subject to be very critically thought about, reflecting on the upper-middle-class white
audience, joining or co-opting a poor black protest. This is
not really talked about and there is so much to be addressed.
As a white middle-class kid myself who listens to a lot of
dance hall and reggae, I am constantly checking in with the
fact that I can't call it mine. So reggae causes me to think.
When you're in clubs and there are white and black audiences grooving to reggae, it is a lot more apparent and you
are confronted with this" (2001).
MEANING
That music is meaningful, no one doubts. However, great debates have
ensued over whether the meaning resides in musical materials themselves or is ascribed to musical materials by someone for some particular reason. Is there something really martial about the music played
by a brass band as an army marches by, or is that an association we
have learned? Does a lullaby really put a child to sleep, or is it something else such as loving attention that lulls the child into secure rest?
With most ethnomusicologists, I think the latter: people make music
meaningful, whether that meaning is individual or communally agreed
upon.
Music and Textual Meaning.
Melody set to words constitutes much
of the world's musical repertoire. Perhaps it is because everyone can
sing, with or without an instrument. Perhaps it is because of the capacity of music to heighten the expressivity of a text. In the Baroque period (c. 1600-1750 C.E.) of European music, composers used what was
called "word painting" to heighten expressivity in quite literal ways
a falling melody on the word morire (to die), for instance. Blues singers
11
in America improvise expressively to elicit even more meaning from already meaningful texts.
Another reason for singing texts is the license it gives musicians to
say something not permitted in ordinary speech. A great deal of covert
and overt political protest has been delivered in song. In "Calypso Freedom," Sweet Honey in the Rock reminds listeners of the necessity of
the civil rights movement of the 1960s while renewing the protest in
1989 with new text set to an old song (CD track 6).
Through the ages narrators have told their tales musically. The TexasMexican corrido is a genre that has proven to be an effective avenue for
protest, as well as a narrative. "The Ballad of Csar Chavez" (figure 1.4,
CD track 7) relates an important event in American history: the march
of that famed Mexican American leader in the struggle for rights for
Companeros campesinos
este va a ser un ejemplo
esta marcha la llevamos
hasta mero Sacramento.
Companion farmers
This is going to be an example
This (protest) march we'll take
To Sacramento itself.
13
came a nexus of the religious tradition of pilgrimage and the contemporary form of demonstration. References to the Lady of Guadalupe allude to a major shrine in Mexico, the Basilica of the Lady of Guadalupe.
Among the narrative genres that link music to text for the expression and heightening of meaning, musical drama is perhaps the single
best example. In Balinese theater the nexus between music and the narrative both in terms of mood and action is so close and so familiar to
audiences that the dramatic meaning is automatically remembered
when the same musical material occurs without words in a nontheatrical context.
We might assume that a sung text is meant to be understood. Not
necessarily so! Even when a Central Javanese gamelan (ensemble) includes vocalists, the text they sing may not be immediately intelligible.
Not only do their voices blend into the greater ensemble sound, but the
poems are usually in old Javanese language that few listeners know (CD
track 8; figure 1.5). For the few who can understand, the meaning lies ^
both in the text itself and in the singing of it; for the less knowledgeable, the meaning lies in the recognition that an old text is being sung,
in the assurance that tradition continues.
FIGURE 1.4 Song text: "The Ballad of Cisar Chavez." Texas-Mexican corrido.
(From Las Voces de los Campesinos: Francisco Garcia and Pablo andjuanita Saludado Sing Corridas
about the Farm Workers and Their Union. Reproduced with permission from the Centerfor the Study
of Comparative Folklore and Mythology, UCLA, FMSC-1.)
migrant farmworkers. In spring 1965 the first major strike against grape
growers took the form of a march from Delano, California, to the state's
capital, Sacramento, to meet with then-Governor Edmund "Pat" Brown.
Because of the religious orientation of Mexican culture, the march be-
FIGURE 1.5 Central Javanese gamelan playing for wayang kulit (leather puppet play). (Photo by Kathleen Kam)
15
is not only the style of the music that stays with us but also the memory of the meaning it had at that crucial time in our lives.
Student Lisa McCabe: "Music helps me understand myself.
I know if I instinctively want to hear a certain sad song, that
something must be bothering me. Or if I want to hear a song
that reminds me of home, I miss my friends."
Student Shanesha Brooks: "I find that if a song that I
wouldn't normally listen to is playing on the radio during a
time when I am having a good time, it is attached to that
time and therefore it has more meaning than it would otherwise have."
USE
Music is also meaningful because it functions in some way in people's
lives. Music defines, represents, symbolizes, expresses, constructs, mobilizes, incites, controls, transforms, unites, and so much more. People
rriake music useful in those ways.
I have asked many people about the place of music in their lives.
Many have replied: "Oh, I'm not interested in music at all." Then they
admit regularly listening to music in their cars, occasionally going to a
performance, dancing on a date, exercising with a Walkman, or otherwise putting music into their lives. This they may categorize as enjoyment, as entertainment rather than musical activity. However they regard it, they are making music useful.
Music can be made to function in multiple ways. As a mode of interaction among people, it serves a social function. Arousing public sentiment is a political function. Praising God is a spiritual function. Creating a romantic mood is an affective function. Untold numbers of
people make a living from musicfrom paid performers to students
who work in music libraries and record shops. Students in one of my
courses had these comments to add: "Involvement in music looks good
on a college application; thaf s a status function, a statement of selfworth." "Music helps me understand other people and their actions, to
place myself in another person's shoes." "It's a stress reliever." "It quiets my anger and otherwise improves my mood." "Music helps me fo-
In the real world and now in the virtual world, however, music can
be heard in vastly different places and at any time. It can easily be experienced as utterly decontextualizeddivorced from its time and
place, cut off from its original makers, meanings, and uses as musicians
collect sounds from all over the world to create, as the singer Marc Anthony put it, "world music in a Long Island basement" (Buia 2001:10).
We can no longer assume that ethnic musical materials will serve as
markers of particular ethnic identities, for example. Such globally
shared music (or "global music," as most ethnomusicologists call it) is
.constantly recontextualized by those who listen to it, given new meanings], and made to perform newas well as the same oldfunctions.
Other musical boundaries are being superseded as well. Musical ownership is challenged by sampling. Boundaries between musical genres
such as jazz, rock, and classical are routinely breached. The creative process continues as music and music making become what people want
them to be.
TRANSMISSION
One of the most crucial factors for music anywhere is the process by
which it is taught and learned. The means by which this happens are
oral and visual (usually referred to as written). In ethnomusicology we
17
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mala pattern:
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jaK pattern:
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19
The third condition is a system of reinforcement: a system that assures that memory of the music will be periodically renewed. "Oldies"
radio broadcasts perform this function; recurring music in a religious
calendrical cycle does as well, such as carols sung at Christmas or
prayers chanted at Passover. In some situations, the responsibility for
reinforcing memories is taken by institutions. In Java (Indonesia), musicians at the royal courts hold rehearsals expressly to maintain musi-
FIGURE 1.6
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ACTIVITY -l\8 Try-copying at least. half the-notation infigme i.7,'tb ixpepefUe the*flow of it^ Then} using the, guides in
figures l.B and 1.9, mtrj"followingjhe instructions i$gives, play-'
- ing some stringed"instrument..
What 'does' this notation 'Hot tell you?" "Thai is, what is left for
t the teacher to transmit, or the player to interpret?' This notation
* is desMptive\ father than prescriptive.
t
FIGURE 1.9
niques required in the first column of notation of the piece. Figure 1.9
shows the Chinese numbers used to indicate the six strings of the instrument. Figure 1.10 shows how the techniques and numbers are combined in the notation.
24
THINKING MUSICALLY
ALOHA OE.
SONG and CHORUS.
Composed by H.R.H. LILIUOKALANI
Time ilonature:
C = common lime.
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25
CHAPTER 2
T h i n k i n g
about
Instruments
C$>
The countless and varied musical instruments that have existed through
time are evidence of how people make music meaningful and useful in
their lives. Because people have taken them wherever they have gone
for signals in war, for entertainment on expeditions, as items for trade,
as gifts for foreign potentatesinstruments also provide evidence of
cultural diffusion. A notice posted by Craig McCrae on the Society for
Ethnomusicology internet list offers an excellent example of this, with
the accordion as example:
One vital but little-known accordion tradition is found in the Khorezm
region of Uzbekistan, in recent centuries seat of the Khiva khanate
and an important center of high civilization since ancient times. The
most typical Khorezmian ensembles combine the diatonic accordion
with vocals, doyra (frame drum) and the Azerbaijani tar (a plucked,
fretted lute with sympathetic strings, a bit smaller than the Iranian
tar). . . . Russian colonists brought the accordion to the region in the
late nineteenth century and the locals quickly adopted it for their own
use. A high point in Khorezmian accordion history was in the 1930s
when Soviets organized women's ensembles with forty or fifty accordions. (27 July 2000; cited with permission)
When people design and craft instruments, they both express cultural values and create musical practices through them. One basic question is whether instruments should be standardized. "Definitely!" say
music makers and instrument makers wherever mass production and
ensemble practice foster standardization. "Definitely not!" says the
sitarist in India. "Add a string for me" (CD track 11). Most Indian music ensembles are small, and mass production of instruments is still low,
so the idea of idiosyncratic instruments flourishes.
"Standardize the pitch of all instruments in this ensemble for me,"
says a Javanese purchaser to a smithy, "but make its tuning slightly dif-
27