Does music matter? Of course it does
Posted 10 weeks 2 days ago byThese are what I wondered--and concluded--as I sat uncomfortably through a "Christian" rock band’s free outdoor concert at the San Bernardino County Fair Grounds in Victorville, California with my daughter and grandson Sunday evening. I confess I had not attended a rock concert since my buddies and I went to the Avalon Ball Room in San Francisco in 1966 or so. It was "psychedelic" in those days, while Hawk Nelson was more wholesome but probably much louder. I had difficulty distinguishing between one song and the next during the hour the band played, except when they were fast or slow. Fortunately some kind soul supplied me with a pair of easily insertable earplugs and thus saved my hearing!
Since it was Mothers’ Day, the young musicians said some nice words about mothers and induced eight of them to come on stage for a time. And the musicians did say that they were Christians, who appreciate the fact that God forgives them for their bad choices, which is to say their "many" bad choices. Nothing was said about how God would judge them or whether He would regard their music as "a joyful noise" unto Him. I was just struck with the difficulty in distinguishing Hawk Nelson’s music from any other rock band's, whatever their religious pretensions or lack of them. I also had some more comprehensive reflections.
At least since the ancient Greek philosopher Plato recommended education in music for the guardian class in his classic work Republic, thoughtful persons have weighed in on whether music has an effect on the body politic, for good or for ill. Some say effects are undeniable, but others disagree. But whatever anyone says, our actions make clear that the "ayes" have it.
The discussion makes no sense unless we understand the full dimensions of what music is. It is not merely what is performed by musicians but a powerful aspect of our being which can help counteract others. Thus, Plato, mindful of the fact that the very qualities of courage, strength and especially spiritedness that are necessary for the guardians of the polity to defeat enemies in war, unchecked are dangerous to the safety and well-being of their fellow citizens.
To temper the violence and rage that animate guardians in wartime but make them dangerous in peacetime, and indeed, to encourage balanced souls, there must be developed a love of what is good, true and beautiful. This "music" education promotes peaceful intercourse and amicable relations. Those familiar with young David’s playing of soothing harp music for the troubled soul of King Saul will know instantly what is meant here.
But Plato’s discussion of music is incomplete without grasping his understanding of the broader aspects of music, not to mention its dangers. As suggested above, for Plato, music comprehended what was also called poetry in ancient times and what has been known as literature in more modern times.
Recall that poets have long credited their "muse" as the source of their talent. This refers to the part of their souls that generates the words and sounds, the ideas and images, that move us to laugh, cry, brood or cheer about our experiences and feelings in our human condition.
Music, or poetry, is never without significance for what we know or believe, but it appeals primarily to our emotions. As such, it has the power to bypass our own experience and certainly our reasoning. That is why, in Plato’s imaginary Republic, the poets who stimulated antisocial or immoral desires in people were "banned." This was not intended to demonstrate the virtues of censorship but to teach wise souls that it makes all the difference what moves the hearts of citizens.
While any period of our history could be cited to show this, nothing makes it plainer than the revolution in music that occurred in the 1960s when already volatile rock ‘n roll music took a radical turn. Its words, its beat and its performance were blatantly sexual and therefore highly attractive to youthful passions. Not surprisingly, the generations most directly affected or charmed, elevated their bodily desires above all else, making marriage, family, church, work and politics the worse for it.
"The personal is the political" was the motto of the eminently forgettable New Left that carried forth the Old Left’s socialistic agenda with an audacity that often embarrassed their forbears. New Deal Democrats did not advocate "free love" or "doing your own thing," but the drug-taking, psychedelic music loving, and sexually uninhibited partisans of a society with no taboos, had no such hesitation.
Political philosopher Alan Bloom, author of The Closing of the American Mind (1987) warned that sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll had come to define our young people to such an extent that their minds were not very open to a higher education that liberates them from harmful prejudices.
One noteworthy casualty of the rootless music and poetry was church. Abandoning the spiritually and theologically based hymns that so distinguished diverse denominations in America, the so-called "Jesus Freaks" took refuge in a god less judgmental than forgiving, thereby giving rise to the "feel good" approaches that have drawn recent generations into growing church flocks.
The rock music played in thousands of our churches today may have lyrics praising God, but the feel of the music and, more importantly, its effect, is to diminish the sacred. And what was at first the preserve of young people has, with the coming of new generations, left us with aging contingents of gratified, but not uplifted, church goers. Hardly anyone, especially but not solely among the men, feels any desire to dress well in God’s house.
If this isn’t enough, generations of Americans are going deaf! –from the noisy concerts indoors or outdoors, in ballrooms or dance halls, in churches or county fairs. When loyalty to the country, and reverence for the divine, take second place to personal gratification, whether we admit it or not, we are in trouble. I have no cure to offer other than a long-term education in our country’s heritage, and in our civilization’s Biblical faith and philosophic wisdom.













Thoughts
Music
Submitted on May 14th, 2008 by rom12921Playing an listening to music gives me a good feeling. I have to admit that I visualize the chords and relationships between notes as it's or I'm playing. Always wondered if other people do that or not.
A few thoughts as a
Submitted on May 13th, 2008 by wishnevskyA few thoughts as a musician, and an old hippie.
I hear many folk and rock songs as anthems, best examples, Leonard Cohen and Jefferson Airplane. The words might have been profane, but the music soared.
Arena rock, with all its excess, also played anthemic music sometimes, while these rappers just get ugly. But the R&B as they call it now, sometimes has the "spiritual" sound. And i don't exactly mean gospel either. I mean small "s" spiritual.
You might study or remember that Plato was a philosophical descendant of Pythagoras, who used musical theory and number theory as the basis of his philosophy. Math and music are really closely related.
The real benefit of music is not to the audience, it is to the brain of the musician. See Oliver Sacks "Musicophilia" for more details.
Nice post. Thanks