"Music is the deepest of the arts and deep beneath all arts.
So E. M. Forster wrote somewhere. If swimming suggested to me the idea of
physical flight, then music suggested something much more. Music was a kind of
penetration. Perhaps absorption is a less freighted word. The penetration or
absorption of everything into itself. I don’t know if you have ever taken LSD,
but when you do so the doors of perception, as Aldous Huxley, Jim Morrison and
their adherents ceaselessly remind us, swing open wide. That is actually the
sort of phrase, unless you are William Blake, that only makes sense when there
is some LSD actually swimming about inside you. In the cold light of the cup of
coffee and banana sandwich that are beside me now it appears to be nonsense,
but I expect you know what it is taken to mean. LSD reveals the whatness of
things, their quiddity, their essence.
The wateriness of water is suddenly revealed to you, the
carpetness of carpets, the woodness of wood, the yellowness of yellow, the
fingernailness of fingernails, the allness of all, the nothingness of all, the
allness of nothing. For me music gives access to every one of these essences of
existence, but at a fraction of the social or financial cost of a drug and
without the need to cry ‘Wow!’ all the time, which is one of LSD’s most distressing
and least endearing side-effects.
Other arts do this too, but other arts are for ever confined
and anchored by reference. Sculptures are either figuratively representative or
physically limited words by their material, which is actual and palpable. The
words in poems are referential, they breathe with denotation and connotation,
suggestion and semantics, coding and signing. Paint is real stuff and the
matter of painting contains itself in a frame. Music, in the precision of its
form and the mathematical tyranny of its laws, escapes into an eternity of
abstraction and an absurd sublime that is everywhere and nowhere at once. The
grunt of rosin-rubbed catgut, the saliva-bubble blast of a brass tube, the
sweaty-fingered squeak on a guitar fret, all that physicality, all that clumsy
‘music-making’, all that grain of human performance, so messier than the
artfully patinated pentimenti or self-conscious painterly mannerism of the
sister arts, transcends itself at the moment of its happening, that moment when
music actually becomes, as it makes the journey from the vibrating instrument,
the vibrating hi-fi speaker, as it sends those vibrations across to the human
tympanum and through to the inner ear and into the brain, where the mind is set
to vibrate to frequencies of its own making.
The
nothingness of music can be moulded by the mood of the listener into the most
precise shapes or allowed to float as free as thought; music can follow the
academic and theoretical pattern of its own modality or adhere to some
narrative or dialectical programme imposed by a friend, a scholar or the
composer himself. Music is everything and nothing. It is useless and no limit
can be set on its use. Music takes me to places of illimitable sensual and insensate
joy, accessing points of ecstasy that no angelic lover could ever locate, or
plunging me into gibbering weeping hells of pain that no torturer could ever
devise. Music makes me write this sort of maundering adolescent nonsense
without embarrassment. Music is in fact the dog’s bollocks. Nothing else comes
close."
Stephen Fry: Moab Is My Washpot
(and all the quotation marks the printer can spare)
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