The lost music with which the world worlds
Arthur Haswell, BA
Arthur Haswell, BA
Quote:...Of course, we listen to music more than ever. But the way we attend to music is entirely cordoned off, reserved solely for music itself. As such, it is as if music came into being out of a vacuum, and we struggle to understand why it exists or where it came from. Why is it so unlike anything else in the world? What is its purpose? How can a melody with no explicit meaning or message move me and have such power over me when really it is nothing but a jumble of noises?
There is no answer to this question because it is based on a false premise. The false premise rests on the presupposition that a jumble of noises is how the world should be, according to any right-thinking person, while music is a strange, almost miraculous exception and illusion. But this is merely a prejudice borne of our current hylomaniac [Editor’s note: hylomania is an obsession with matter] worldview (the contours of hylomania should become apparent as this short essay proceeds). That isn’t to deny that there is such a thing as a jumble of noises; of course there is, but it is an edge case of the musical.
For the ancient Greeks, music was not simply a stimulating arrangement of sounds, but a mountain stream springing from the source of being. The symmetries of musical intervals were not arbitrary, but reflected the divine proportions that ordered the cosmos. Pythagoras and his acolytes, upon discovering that musical harmonies could be expressed as simple ratios, saw in this a profound revelation about the nature of existence itself. This idea was crystallized in the notion of the ‘music of the spheres’: a cosmic symphony conducted by the movements of celestial bodies, imperceptible to mortal ears, yet governing all aspects of being. Plato, in his Timaeus, described the world’s soul as constructed from musical ratios. For the Greeks, music wasn’t cordoned off from the rest of existence, but was considered an expression of the deepest structures of reality...
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell