Messiaen and Thoreau- the
interpreter and the observer
I.
"...art
partly completes what nature cannot bring to a finish, and partly imitates
her."
- Aristotle, Physics
In
transcribing birdsong for instruments played by humans, one can encounter
several obstacles. Olivier
Messiaen the most exposed, accurate, and perhaps gifted of all bird-transcribing
composers relates the difficulties of transcribing birdsong:
The bird...sings in extremely quick
tempi which are absolutely impossible for our instruments; I am therefore
obliged to transcribe the song at a slower tempo. In addition, this rapidity is allied to an extreme
acuteness, the bird being able to sing in excessively high registers which are
inaccessible to our instruments; I transcribe the song, therefore, one, two,
three, even four octaves lower.
And that is not all: for the same reasons, I am obliged to suppress the
very small intervals which our instruments cannot play.[1]
For
practical reasons several approximations were necessary in Messiaen’s transcription
work from the outset. But as they
entered the realm of musical composition these approximations began to exceed
the immediate demands of practicability, transforming instead into musical
creations.
With the
exception perhaps of the sixth movement of Messiaen's Chronochromie (in which Messiaen leaves behind his
preoccupations and fascinations with color, harmony, and references to other
environmental elements by composing a 18-part counterpoint based on accurate
descriptions of various birdsong), Messiaen's musical imagination was not
satisfied by mere representation of birds. He did not transcribe birdsong
simply as a source of musical material. He was equally interested in the
evocation of a particular landscape or the depiction of a passage of time. His
portrayals of birds can often dwell on elements not related to the actual sound
of the bird, for example the intense colors of the avian plumage (tying into
Messiaen's synaesthesia), religious beliefs (viewing birds as representations
of divinity on earth), or social dynamics within the avian community (appearing
to some listeners as rather anthropomorphic projections). Messiaen’s musical birds
sometimes require a leap of imagination on the listener's part; he might, for
musical reasons, bring birds together that would normally not reside in the
same geographical zone. He might
orchestrate particular birdsongs using instruments one wouldn't usually
associate with the range and timbre of birds. Boulez recalls pointing out to Messiaen (when speaking about
his surprise in encountering birds portrayed by bassoons and bass clarinets):
"no bird is gigantic enough!"
Boulez later remarked: "What [Messiaen] wrote was his imagination of birdsong. If you analyze birdsong scientifically,
you find none of the intervals Messiaen wrote."[2] Perhaps Boulez’s criticism is
limited, leaving Messiaen’s timbral and rhythmic accomplishments in
transcription unexamined.
The incongruency
between Messiaen's fieldwork ("I tried to copy exactly the song of the
bird typical of a region, surrounded by the neighboring birds of its
habitat…I am personally very proud of the accuracy of my work"[3])
and its subsequent journey into the process of composition reveals that for him
the representation of bird song in a musical work was not complete after merely
having carefully observed and intimately gotten to know the birdsong and having
transcribed it in the most exact way musical notation would allow. One can assume that he accomplished
this during his fieldwork, but that these results were not sufficient to
justify direct inclusion into a composition. Messiaen himself states that
accuracy is often not an issue with the use of birdsong in music: "It is ridiculously servile to
copy nature."[4] The artistic process that followed,
creating music
out of birdsong, was equally if not more essential to Messiaen, a stance shared
by Igor Stravinsky, who, in his Poetics of Music lectures wrote: "Natural
sounds suggest music to us, but are not yet themselves music… Tonal
elements become music only by virtue of their being organized, and that such
organization presupposes a conscious human act."[5]
Hence, according to this view, birdsong by itself does not yet constitute a
musical entity. It may provide a basis and inspiration for a work, but not the
substance of the work itself. The delight, wonder, and awe that
Messiaen maintained throughout his lifetime in observing natural phenomena
stands, in my view, not in opposition to his desire to transform, transcend and
often radically alter these elements in his artistic work. It may be an idealization of nature,
keeping perhaps largely with the classical artistic tradition, as well as a
declaration of faith. But it is also uniquely marked by the curious,
inquisitive and active mind of a most perceptive observer.
II.
"Now
I will do nothing but listen...
I
hear all sounds running together, combined fused or following,
Sounds
of the city and sounds out of the city, sounds
of the day and
night..."
- Walt Whitman, Song of
Myself
Clearly
then delineating a step beyond Messiaen’s conception of art is the view
of certain artists who may equate elements of the natural environment with art,
or more specifically, environmental sound with music. Here, the perception,
identification and location of the elements constituting an environment are of
paramount importance, while the technique of (artistic) representation is
secondary, invisible, or simply non-existent. The icon and flag bearer of
several of these "environmental" artists is the naturalist Henry
David Thoreau. Thoreau engaged in acts of conscious listening to his environment,
contributing first hand documents regarding his sonic surroundings fifty years
prior to the advent of recording devices. Many 20th-century composers are drawn
to Thoreau's example of an “eternal observer”, as portrayed by
Ralph Waldo Emerson in his Eulogy:
Mr. Thoreau dedicated his
genius with such entire love to the fields, hills and waters of his native
town, that he made them known and interesting to all reading Americans, and to
people over the sea. The river on whose banks he was born and died he knew from
its springs to its confluence with the Merrimack. He had made summer and winter observations on it for many
years, and at every hour of the day and night.[6]
To
avoid generalizing the work of several composers who use environmental sounds
in their music or are inspired by natural processes or mirror such processes in
their work (i.e. R. Murray
Schafer, Pauline Oliveros, Annea Lockwood, Pierre Schaeffer, Brian Eno, Max
Neuhaus, Steve Reich) I'd like to focus on two composers with different,
perhaps antithetical, approaches regarding the use of technology to incorporate
environmental elements in music: John Cage and Alvin Lucier.
John
Cage's love of Thoreau was evident since his personal rediscovery of Walden in 1968 about which he
wrote: "Thoreau had this view that music is continuous, only listening is
intermittent."[7] Cage placed great importance on the act
of observation without interpretation.
He recognized that the act of listening, even to the sound of everyday
life, could become an aesthetic experienced and be used in art and shunned “composition” in the
traditional sense, finding it rather egoistic and dictatorial. "Having no
need for art - Pleased with what I see - pleased with what I hear - surrounded
by multiplicity... - a world without art - and that it wasn't bad."[8] Cage eagerly used technological
resources (recording and amplification devices) for studying or reproducing
environmental sounds, and credited these resources for enhancing people's
ability to intensify their perception of natural sounds.
It's actually electronic
music, the tape recorder and everything that gave us the opportunity to record
natural events, and which focuses our attention back, away from theories of
music to the actual experience of hearing wherever we happen to be...THOREAU
LISTENED the way electronic composers now listen. The electronics have brought our attention back to nature.[9]
III.
In
contrast to this, the composer Alvin Lucier displays a distrust of using
recorded material to evoke natural sounds in his work. His musical relationship
to the environment often involved mimicking processes in nature that appeal to
him:
Every composer needs some
kind of system with which to operate...I've found that I like to study
environmental systems ...It doesn't interest me to take a taping machine and
tape record the sounds of birds or bats.
But what I do enjoy is to study the means by which these animals or the
natural worlds use particular sounds with which to survive...in imitating the
natural, the way the natural world works, you find out about it, and you also
connect to it in a beautiful way.
You didn't exploit it. I
would feel that tape recording dolphins or bats as somehow exploiting their
art.[10]
For
a composer whose majority of work involves electronically generated sound, this
statement might come as a surprise.
Lucier often credits his discovery of pulse-wave oscillators and
homemade electronic devices as instrumental in solidifying his musical
language. His electronic means are
often comparatively simple, and he stresses that he uses technology in a
minimal way. An example of his
using simple technology to mirror a natural process is his piece Vespers. Lucier wanted to imitate the orientation
and communication techniques of bats by using an audio generator that sends out
a pulse that is similar to the sound-sending and -receiving perceptive
mechanisms of bats. He states that
he is not as interested in the actual sound of bats, as in their exceptional
communicative ability, and finds that creating a piece like this deepens his
(and hopefully the listener’s) appreciation and connection with the
natural world.
In general, I
am much more interested in sonic experiments… than I am in the latest
electronic programs. So in a certain sense I have an anti-technological
approach in music, though I am not really against new technology, but I find it
much more effective and fruitful to create musical experiments with the
simplest and most basic objects, including objects found in nature, to expand [one’s] perception of sound and music.[11]
Perhaps recording and playing back natural
sounds on tape seems too clinical or specific for Lucier, who has a more
wholistic perception of nature. He
describes a "universal sound", of which all specific sounds are only
a part, and one sound containing a host of other sounds- implied, triggered, or
disguised.
IV.
In comparison,
Messiaen’s approach to the incorporation of natural sound in music
stresses the dimension of craft, transformation, and artifice – perhaps
an aestheticization. There clearly is usually a desire by the composer to
reference the original “source” sound (a particular bird in its
habitat) which may be indicated in the title of a piece or a text preceding the
score. But the music itself is removed from the source sound through a process
of subjective musical abstraction.
In the case
of Lucier, an abstraction is also taking place but it is less subjective.
Rather it is an extraction of structural properties from the source sound (e.g.
the spatial orientation mechanisms of bats) and their application to or
implication in (art)music.
Cage
finally neither abstracts nor extracts but opens the listening space to embrace
all sonic elements in their totality, making the borders between art (artifice)
and nature permeable.
Although Cage and Lucier’s manner of
incorporating elements from nature and the environment into their works may
differ, they both place great emphasis on sensitizing their listener to their
environment (even to the most common sounds). Their scores are often open in meaning, preferring (Cage more
explicitly than Lucier) to extract themselves (as the creator of the work) as
much as possible from the aesthetic experience. They intentionally go only half way in the compositional
process, creating a framework in which a listener can enter into a sonic realm
to provide the other half, without the composer guiding, interpreting,
controlling, or commenting on his/her experience. In this, they exemplify closeness to Thoreau’s
“eternal observer”.
[1] Claud Samuel: Entretiens avec Olivier Messiaen, Pierre Belfond, 1967, S.113-14
[2] Matthew Gurewitsch:An Audubon in Sound, in: The Atlantic Monthly; vol. 279 no. 3, S. 95
[3] Claud Samuel, S. 111-112
[4] Olivier Messiaen: Technique de mon language musical, Leduc, 1942 Chapter IX
[5] Igor Stravinsky: Poetics of Music, Harvard University Press, 1942, S. 23
[6] Ralph Waldo Emerson: The Portable Emerson, Penguin Books, 1981, S. 523
[7] John Cage interview with Robin White at Crown Point Press, Oakland California, 1978
[8] John Cage: Overpopulation & Art, in John Cage, Composed in America, University of Chicago Press 1994, S.127
[9] Walter Zimmermann, Desert Plants, Vancouver Press, 1976, S. 56
[10]Walter Zimmermann: Desert Plants, S.139
[11]Anton Rovner: Interview with Alvin Lucier, www.musica-ukrainica.odessa.ua/i-rovner-lucier.html