5/3/2017
I used to love to dance before I became a musician. Sometimes I find myself reacting with music rhythmically, but it's not dancing. Even in classical there are some pieces you can dance to, and are written specifically as dances (Gigue, Gavotte). The Pulcinella Suite by Stravinsky is very "danceable" in some sections. Once you've done lots of writing you can lose your ability to dance. Words and music are its cure. Since music composition is more like writing words, the composer gets stuck in the frontal lobe. (Daniel Dennett doesn't think enjoyment of one's own profession is dulled by doing it.) 5/2024: I still think words and music are a “cure”. There is a primal connection between the two, as evidenced by aphasia patients still able to recall music. Very often I’ll get song ideas from repeating 1-4 bar phrases in dreams. They are earworms essentially and are further evidence of the connection between language and music. There is now more evidence, at least anecdotally, that music came before language in the form of onomatopoeia or mimicking of animal sounds going back 30,000 years. The first flutes were made from bird bones, which they probably used to mimic bird songs as a way of communicating with them. Whistled language is another example. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whistled_language This would be something I would hear in a dream--a 4-bar groove. But it's the rhythm in the phrase "I used to love to dance". that generates the music There are different ways of expressing it rhythmically, but the nature of music should be more immediate, so I go with the first rhythm that comes to mind as I find chords on my guitar.
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AuthorLee Barry, Musician/Content Producer Archives
May 2024
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