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THE
COMPOSER TO
MEDITATIVE
APHORISMS
CLASSIC-Life:
there is a group of 20 pieces of work, the so called Meditative
Aphorisms, which are to give a special insight into the microcosm
of music if I am right. You also name different spheres.
Can you tell us something about this?
PETER
HUEBNER:
These pieces of work mainly give an insight into the tonal family relationships
within the microcosm of music. We can learn a lot from this.
What we know in our human everyday life, the different generations
great-grand- parents, grandparents, parents, children, grandchildren
etc. of both sides can also be found in the microcosm of music.
Only that in the microcosm of music, there is always one generation
that has the final say, and the other generations the further
they are away from this generation have less and less to say,
and/or appear more and more faintly. In the example of the tone with
its overtones, we see the corresponding: the so-called overtones,
more distant from the fundamental tone, appear more and more faintly.
There are generation problems everywhere in life. The greater the gap
is between the generations, the more these problems become evident
the more difficult it seems to get on with each other.
Who is right? is the question always asked. And each generation
claims to be right. The older ones claim that, due to their old age,
they have more experience, and that is why they should be right. And
the younger ones reply that they have more original creativity, and
that for this reason they are equally entitled to be right. We all know
these arguments, and our instinct tells us: well it must be like
that, it has always been like that, and it will be the same in future.
The
microcosm of music thoroughly enlightens us in this respect: the generation
problem comes about, when the natural harmonious order between the generations
is not observed.
At the same time, the microcosm of music does indeed differentiate between
the generations but it does not say indiscriminately that the
older ones must rank higher in the hierarchy than the younger
ones.
From
the viewpoint of the microcosm of music, the older ones
may just as well have the final say towards the younger ones
as the younger ones towards the older ones,
only: it is not possible for them to have the final say at one and the
same time.
The
microcosm of music does indeed differentiate between the past and the
future, but seen from the present both are equally significant. Seen
from the microcosm of music, evolution does not fundamentally move only
from the past via the present to the future,
but just as well from the future via the present
to the past.
In
this respect, seen from the microcosm of music the grandfather
is not indiscriminately the older person and the grandchild the younger
person, but they are both only viewpoints of the person who, from his
supposed present looks forward and / or backwards. If he looks back,
he thinks he sees the grandfather, and if he looks forwards, he thinks
he sees the grandchild.
But
if the observer now turns around, he again believes to see the grandfather
in the back, whom he previously regarded as the grandchild, and in front
of him the grandchild, whom he previously considered to be the grandfather.
We always think that all developments only move from the past into the
future.
The microcosm of music teaches us that this is a biased prejudice, resulting
from the observers view and/or point of view. But the reality
can also be vice versa.
What
do we gather from this? Possibly it is entirely true that the grandchild
is the grandfather, and can thus also claim, as so far only the grandfather
has been able to, that he is older and is therefore right.
Apparently though, there is no doubt for anybody in our time in this
respect: the grandfather is older, that is already in his passport,
and the grandchild is younger, and therefore it doesnt have a
passport yet. For most that is sufficient evidence. But obviously it
doesnt help to facilitate life between the grandfather and the
grandchild, and to solve the generation problem.
There
are grandchildren who listen to their grandparents, and are happy with
that, and there are grandparents, who listen to their grandchildren,
and are also happy to do so. For both to be happy, one has to listen
more to the other. The microcosm of music also teaches us the same thing.
Why do I range so far afield in my explanations?
The
natural problems of the generations run through our daily lives. And
the reasons for this lie hidden in the existence of space and time,
and not at all in the competency of people that is what the microcosm
of music teaches us. But a harmonious togetherness can be learned, and
it concerns the natural intelligent attitude towards space and time
in our thinking.
The
key to harmony between people is thus founded in the consciousness of
the individual: in his ability to handle space and time in a natural
way: to observe natural space-time-orders, to respect them and on no
account to ignore them.
This is what the microcosm of music teaches us and out of this
results the revelation and/or knowledge of the laws of harmony of the
microcosm of music.
In
those Meditative Aphorisms with the general title Insight
into the Microcosm of Music I have introduced those space-time-shifts,
and thus the generation problems in a systematic order, and have shown
them as a natural phenomenon of creation.
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My
most beautiful melodies have come to me in dreams. I practically
composed this entire concerto in a semitrance state in which,
however, I was always conscious.
The
composer while creating any work of lasting value stands face
to face with this Eternal Energy from which all life flows, and
he draws on that infinite power.
The
composer must sit in the silence and wait for the direction from
a force that is superior to the intellect. If he knows how to
contact that power, he becomes the projector of the infinite invisible
into visibility, or rather into audibility, in the composers
case. In my opinion, the great com- poser is not so much the reflection
of God, as has been claimed, but rather the expression of God,
on this earth plane.
In proportion as he grasps this profound truth will he reveal
to the visible, audible world the Divinity within him.
Max
Bruch
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Truth
is within us all;
it takes us
From outward things,
Whateer we may believe
There is an inmost center
In us all,
Where truth abides
in fulness;
But around
Wall upon wall,
The gross flesh
hems us in.
Robert
Browning
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Beauty
originates
from a
certain harmony
of contradictions.
Thomas
von Aquin
_____________
Never was a composer more feted in his own day than Mendelssohn,
while Schuhmann was not recognised at his true worth until long
after his death; but today the verdict is that Schumann was the
greater and more original creative genius.
Mendelssohn
died at 38, but he left no less than 121 opus numbers. Of these
only a comparatively small fraction are still played, but Schumann
looms up greater all the time. Why? Because he was more original.
Mendelssohn
had wonderful fertility of invention. His melodies flow with an
ease and spontaneity that suggest Mozart; he was also a superior
craftsman but there is far more depth to Schumanns thematic
invention and harmonic idioms.
Max
Bruch
_____________
I
did instinctively what Brahms did both instinctively and consciously.
I composed as the spirit moved me, without comprehending clearly
that I was working with great cosmic law. Whereas Brahms realized,
just as Beethoven did, that he was being aided by Omnipotence.
It is only a supreme creative genius who can rise to such heights.
We composers are projectors of the infinite into the finite.
Edvard
Grieg
_____________
That two things can be united in a harmonious way without
the third is impossible. Because there must be a connection which
unites them. This can help such proportions realize their ultimate
potential. When in any three numbers the middle one is to the
smallest as the largest is in ratio to the middle one and vice
versa, and the smallest to the middle one as the middle to the
largest, then the last and first will be the middle, first and
last. They, all out of necessity, become the same and because
they are the same, become an entity.
Platon
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Sphere
1 introduces only the natural space-time-order of a generation, and
you simply hear that here there are no difficulties and/or no disharmony
or dissonance.
In sphere 2, we have two neighbouring generations, i.e., for instance,
parents and children, and/or grandparents and parents. Here, too, there
are only slight tonal difficulties.
In sphere 3, three generations are introduced under the roof of an aphorism,
and here, too, the difficulties appear to be of a relatively minor nature.
In sphere 4 we find four generations in the house of an aphorism, in
sphere 5 five generations, accordingly in sphere 6, six generations,
and in sphere 7 seven generations.
And
in sphere 7 with seven generations under the roof of an aphorism we
are very much reminded of the sounds of atonal music of the avant-garde
whilst sphere 1 reminded us of simple classical music. In accordance,
the other spheres lie in between, partly closer to folk-music, and partly
closer to the music of the so-called new toners.
These
aphorisms all clarify further the space-time-conformity to natural laws,
which we find in the microcosm of music. That is the reason why, in
these specific compositions, I have given all generations the same right
to vote as is the aspiration in a democracy.
But we can see that this kind of equal democracy is not a natural phenomenon,
and does not function harmoniously if it is not joined in the structure
of a natural hierarchical order.
Thus,
in these Meditative Aphorisms in totally different orchestral
line-ups I wanted to introduce the space-time-shift as such, and to
show that space and time play a major part in natural harmony: that
they can develop, preserve but also destroy natural harmony, and accordingly,
the feeling of natural harmony.
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What
can we learn from this?
First
of all, in these aphorisms we can get to know the disturbance of natural
harmony by space-time-shifts, i.e. the natural basis of all problems
which we nowadays encounter between people.
Listening reveals to us that the tonal deviations and/or dissonances
between neighbouring generations are only of a minor nature, and increase
with further generations.
There
are always tonal connecting points between generations. The neighbouring
generations have more tonal connections the more distant fewer.
From this insight into the microcosm of music, and the natural family
relationships, the whole field of Music and Education finally
grows.
These Meditative Aphorisms reveal archaic dealings with
the phenomenon Harmonics as do the Zen-Symphonies
and Hymns, as well as the symphonies and hymns of The Great
Stream.
The
Art of the Feminine, the Hymns of the Dome, the Violin
Concertos, the Piano Concertos, the Metamorphoses
etc. show the solution of the European classical musicians for the phenomenon
of natural harmony one would like to think, more academic dealings
with the space-time-shift in contrast to the archaic dealings,
as we also find in the laws of harmony of the microcosm of music in
exactly the same way.
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