'Crisis' in Contemporary Music? What Crisis?
THE HEART OF THE MATTER
Is contemporary music in a state of crisis? Answers range from 'certainly' to 'possibly'
to ' not at all'. I would like to contribute
some points to this continuing debate which,
if not altogether original, are ones which
I think do not receive the attention they merit.
Colleagues, I believe the fundamental debate
is not about style or language, and that the
solution is not about marketing or education.
Maybe we all need to invest time and energy
examining the traditional reasons why artists
have always tried to express themselves, be
it by music or any other art form. It may well
be that contemporary music 'is in crisis' but
maybe the real issue and solution is not just
about educating the listener or consumer, but,
to ask 'who is to blame?' Have we lost sight
of the reason why we are composers? Music publishers
have invested a substantial financial amount
in contemporary composers, which is an admirable
commitment to the future of ‘classical’ or
'art’ music.
To publish and market a new
composer, or indeed a new piece, requires not
only a lot of financial nerve but also a high
level of artistic and cultural bravery. Music
publishers work in a unique environment. They
run a business, have to balance the books,
and all investment has to be justified. Also
traditionally a country's cultural heritage
was entrusted to their ability to develop and
nurture the best of new composing talent. Not
only do they have to be able to recognise a
new and exciting voice, but they also have
to try and predict future stylistic developments
and to 'publish for the future' not just for ‘the now'. Get it
right - and the country can draw on a vast reservoir
of creative talent. But get it wrong - and we
become a rubbish dump for mediocrity and the
inane. Into this arena, fraught with pitfalls
and potential for mistakes, I believe, publishers
have always tried to bring a certain amount of
expertise and honour - protecting their artists
from the financial complexities of modern society,
ensuring universal copyright is registered and
investing time and money into the partnership.
All right: they are running a business for profit
- but composers must appreciate that it can a
very risky business indeed. But are publishers
getting it right?
At no other time in the history
of art music has the consumer been more educated,
more knowledgeable and had such easy access
to a wide range of musical styles and genre.
From teenager to granny they all have experience
of dramatic orchestral tapestries through the
medium of films and television. Given the popularity
of the film Lord of the Rings, for instance,
you have to acknowledge that a whole new
generation has been exposed to an experience
of the drama and excitement generated by a
large orchestral canvas, the very building
blocks of classical or art music. I believe
the general public has taste and more importantly,’instinct’ and
can recognise great classical music regardless
of the style or uniqueness of the voice - providing,
that is, the composer has talent, is skilled
and wants to communicate. That does not necessarily
mean writing in a traditional style and not developing
your own voice, but rather holding fast to those
elements that reward the listener and performers.
In my view, however, publishers
have often promoted composers who lack these
essential ingredients and, most importantly,
the indispensable ingredient of 'heart'. Performers
and audiences, I believe, should be rewarded
by those emotional elements in music which
make us all 'more than we are'. Recently I
was in the foyer of my local music college
when a young man approached and showed me a
score. He was at great pains to point out that
he had studied orchestration for years and
that 'that in itself was a great skill'. But
orchestration is not about what is learnt,
but what is needed. The arrogance and sheer
blindness of his approach distressed me. Too
many of our young musicians think that composing
comes from learning rather than, as I believe,
directly from the heart. I did not disillusion
the young man but left him to the mercies of
academia, to which, I am sorry to say, publishers
also too readily succumb.
Even in merely financial
terms, for publishers to ignore the educated
judgment of today's consumers is surely
foolish. There is a whole industry of academic
pretentiousness that has been nurtured and
cultivated by the contemporary music establishment
which is, in my opinion, a million miles
away from the motivation and philosophy of
composers from past generations. Having cultivated
the weed you have little choice but to try
and justify its existence. Why? Is it not better
to cut your losses and acknowledge that music,
as all art forms, has to communicate if it
is to reward. There is a vast worldwide market
for good classical or art music if it communicates
- that is, has drama, energy. Some of the
diet that has been served in the last forty
years does nothing but alienate a consumer
who instinctively knows the quality of the
real product. regardless of the style. How
often has music that is questionable been commissioned
and consequently published, and what turns
out to be its one performance defended on the
grounds that 'the language, and style are so
new that it is bound to be difficult for audiences
to appreciate'. That statement may have been
true for Beethoven’s day but not for today's
highly educated audiences with their access to
a vast information highway.
I was once shown
a score by a leading contemporary composer
and the lecturer who was praising the work
pointed out its great beauty of line and phrasing
- and that the written score 'alone was a work
of art.' I happen to be a tuba player and pointed
out that the orchestration was such that no
matter how much counterpoint and beauty of
line existed on paper, to write for tuba in
its topmost register as the composer had done
meant that all the listener would hear was
that instrument's rather tiresome honking quality.
This remark was met by great derision and incredulity
that I should question the composer’s 'genius'. (For me the genius
would have been the player who could have played
such high notes molto pianissimo in order that
the other woodwind instruments might be heard.)
Of course composers have to stretch and challenge
both performers and a audience. Nobody writes
harder music than I (ask any of the ensembles
that have commissioned works from me), but music
is much more than a technical exercise.
You cannot
learn to be a composer! Composing
is a talent that you develop, an instinct you
follow, in fact a matter of the heart - the
very ingredient which provokes the 'special
response' from performers and their audience.
Years ago I suffered a lot of jealousy and
criticism from so-called more experienced musicians,
who just did not know the meaning of the word
'instinct'. Consequently their music lacked
heart: it might be interesting and have fascinating
textual colour, but if it lacks a soul what
justifies its existence? Or am I missing something
here and does a higher spectrum of a musical
stratosphere exist somewhere that is apparent
only to those individuals who appreciate the
most extreme 'Avant Garde' If so please tell
me: I am willing to study and learn if you
can convince me of the validity of your secret!
How can you align a contemporary piece of art
music (that may repeat a similar phrase over
and over again, or a vast ever changing sound
world where dissonance is piled on dissonance
with no perceptible, and I underline
the word perceptible, logic to the gradient),
with the dramatic vivid orchestral colours
of a film score? True - to anticipate a reply
- 'one is absolute music and the other is wallpaper'
(pretty sophisticated wallpaper, too, I might
add!). The tragedy is that, in today's climate,
the essence of heart and soul, traditionally
found in all music is now, in the wallpaper,
not the absolute, and worse - the consumer
knows it.
I accept that a lot of good
contemporary music has been written and published
in the last few years. The media and general
public however tend only to remember the disasters.
The good pieces may be played more than once
and even enter the repertoire, but the bad
pieces merely reinforce the impression that
art music has lost touch with its source
and is now part of the self-indulgent world
of the elitist musical establishment. Please
note - before you form a lynch party -
that this is not necessarily my opinion,
but what I believe is a public perception,
rightly or wrongly, provoked by the music of
contemporary composers in the last forty years.
No one has more respect for the BBC than I.
It has, for years, fought a rearguard action
to maintain standards,trying always to support
what it believes is music of the highest calibre.
Radio Three, traditionally, has supported,
broadcast and commissioned the best new pieces
especially from young talent. Many established
English composers, past and present, owe their
success to the patronage and support of the
BBC. Working under, sometimes impossible financial
constraints it has tried to bring to the public
attention music that it considered to be of
the highest visionary and artistic worth. However
there lies the rub. It is what it perceives
to be worthy and contributing to an ever-evolving
musical stylistic language. Get
it right - and English music maintains its
place on the world’s
cultural stage Get it wrong - and a cultural
desert will emerge.
The responsibility is immense
and one that must surely weigh
heavily on its management's shoulders. To be
fair the BBC has had considerable experience
and a proven track record but in todays musical
environment there are many more factors and
unknown social variables. I believe that they
do need to keep in touch with public taste
and interest and not always consider it can
dictate the evolution of the language of music.
By the nature of both reputation and cultural
heritage, it has to walk a tightrope of academic
and artistic validity. Sometimes I feel in
the last forty years it has stumbled, and as
we all know it is the stumble that provokes
the gasp that the crowd remember.
The Proms festival is a tremendous celebration
of the BBC's efforts on behalf of classical
music and English composers. I for one appreciate
and stand in awe at its courage, though sometimes
I also worry that a number of the pieces, commissioned
and performed, are only remembered because
of their provocative and controversial sound
world and not for any artistic or emotional
merit. I sincerely hope my worry springs from
naivete and that on this occasion my assessment
and instincts are wrong.
Despite all the criticism
Classic FM has done much to generate and
raise public perception of classical or art
music. It is true that it does not play vast
amounts of the more avant garde contemporary
music, though I do understand that as much
as 40% of its output is devoted to music by
living composers. Classic FM has also been
accused of reducing the listeners' attention
span by concentrating on something akin to
a menu of musical snacks, that is, of cheapening
the product by presenting it in an abridged
format. The fact that this approach is more
in keeping with the marketing philosophies
of today's society seems to be of little consequence
to the critics, who question how a person can
perceive or value the artistic merit of absolute
music if you just broadcast
a fragment of its totality. Maybe, having spent
years researching and evaluating the potential
product, the academics, from their perspective,
have a point. It would be much more rewarding
and aesthetically pleasing to listen to a
complete string quartet, than just one movement.
However we live in a consumer environment and
to market a product, no matter what its artistic
stature, you have to employ the elements that
are psychologically common to that society.
Musical snippets, for instance, feature prominently
in today's advertising campaigns.
Consumers
may not realise they are hearing classical
music, or know the composer, or be able to
name the piece, but are we entitled to criticise
Classic FM for employing the same principles
in their broadcasts? I personally believe
they have simulated and encourage a tremendous
potential for our product as contemporary composers,
much more than we could have ever dreamed
possible. I am reminded of a certain football
club which plays Prokofiev's music just before
the beginning of the game. When a London ballet
company visited the town’s main theatre to perform Prokofiev's
Romeo and Juliet it was amazed to find the venue
had been sold out three months in advance. I
do not know the percentage of football supporters
in the audience but the previous visit, the year
before, had not been very well supported. Coincidence
or not? It would be interesting to find out;
and, by the way, one of the club’s best
selling CDs is apparently a recording of that
very piece. I personally believe that Classic
FM has made a tremendous contribution to the
public acceptance and understanding of classical
music with its intellectual and emotional demands.
If I have a criticism it may be that sometimes
they seem to allow air time choice to be dictated
by the marketing requirements of their advertisers,
but hell! - they have to live, and you cannot
have everything. Which brings me to the record
companies.
I suppose an apt description
of the individuals that run 'the majors' as
they are known, would be 'tough cookies with
hearts and pockets of gold'. I do believe they
live on different planets from those of composers
or indeed artists. However in their defence
they have to operate in an environment where
judgment and instinct are paramount. Like music
publishers they have to anticipate public taste
and demand. Get it right and the financial
rewards are reasonable - and I stress the word
reasonable. Get it wrong and the financial
pressures from their masters are colossal.
Most AandR people I have had dealings with
have been very genuine and committed musicians.
They constantly have to
pick their way through a diplomatic minefield,
dealing with composers and performers who may
have very fragile egos and who may have very
little understanding of the commercial world.
With the best will in the world you cannot
justify investing thousands of pounds in a
product if your instinct tells you there is
going to be a limited return, no matter how
much you believe in the composer. I remember
the head of marketing of a major record company
kept the recording I had sent him of my first
symphony. He had kept it, said his secretary
'because he liked it so
much'; unfortunately he and his team did not
consider it to be of significant commercial
value to market. Not much consolation for the
poor composer who had invested so much time
and effort in the project.
The record companies,
like most of the music publishers, are at
the moment under siege. The only way they can
compete against the thousands of composer-publishers
and small record labels
is to invest a considerable amount in marketing
and tap into their network of world wide
sales, distribution and returns. However they
run the risk of becoming victims of pirating
and copyright infringement, with their product
posted on the web for any individual, ie
thief, to download free of charge. The more
successful they are, with the marketing of
a product, the greater the danger of piracy.
Is it any wonder, considering the risks involved,
that most are reluctant to gamble on a new
composer or more importantly a new
musical style or language. I personally have
a lot of sympathy for their position. True,
they may have their successes but I also
bet there is a lot of gnashing of teeth over
the many failures we do not hear about. I may
have lost money over the recording of my first
symphony, but it was my work and I believe
in its artistic merit. This amount in any case
would be a fraction of the cost a major record
company would budget and risk on a new composer
or piece. I hope, at the very least, that artists
will always try to be fair and see both sides
of the coin.
However I also believe the record companies have to accept some
blame, and are to a certain extent responsible for their own
predicament with regard to classical music. There is a
limit to the amount of return, no matter how popular a Mozart
symphony may be, if the product market is shared with countless
other recordings of the same music. This practice
of over-recording has saturated the market and restricted the
investment in new blood and new products. Any manufacturer
will tell you this is a recipe for disaster. You
have to continue to develop and improve your product if you
hope to maintain consumer interest. To be fair having
witness public and media reaction to contemporary music over
the last 40yrs and the extremes of stylistic language used can
we blame the reluctance of what are essentially business ventures
to invest in a product that has such adverse public and hence
consumer perception and reaction. (Even
the most optimistic of composers would have to admit there would
be a limited financial return and demand for a recording of
a certain piano piece by John Cage) Mention
of John Cage brings me finally to my fellow contemporary composers.
One of the great privileges of my life was to spend so time
on the board of The
British Academy of Composers and Songwriters. I will just never
cease to be amazed at - and hopefully never forget - just
how much time, energy
and generosity of spirit my fellow composers, both popular and
classical, gave in defence of the music of their member
composers and musicians.
These individuals who work so hard for the rights of artists
and composers regardless of the cost or drain on their own
creative resources
and energy cannot be praised enough. What is it that makes them
work so hard and so long to defend and promote the worth of
British Music and composers?
Certainly no financial
gain, as I know all
gave of their time freely, and in some cases,
this unselfish commitment went on for years.
I believe it is nothing more than a belief
in the rightness of what they do as composers
- a generosity of spirit that fuels a desire
to help and support the value of British music
and creative endeavour regardless of its genre.
I never witnessed one moment of envy or jealousy
from these talented individuals - just a wholehearted
commitment to the work of their fellow writers.
Therein lies the hope! If all writers and composers
have such integrity then the journey to producing
art and music that has worth will be revitalised.
I do not pen the words 'Brotherhood of composers'
lightly. I believe passionately in the integrity
of my fellow musicians and artists. The world
needs our vision more than ever. The real music
and art will survive and be triumphant, because
it contains those elements that are at the
core of the human spirit. A crisis in contemporary
music?
Audiences and performers
will always eventually recognise integrity
and the beauty found in music that reflects
the soul of its creator. No government, agency,
tyrant, social ignorance, greed, prejudice,
corruption, analysis or scientific theory can
stand against that universal truth. You may
say that artists, writers and composers are
mere dreamers; but it is this belief
in the higher ideal that touches all, to
replenish and revitalise society. To each his
own, all to have their place, each to contribute,
in his or her own unique way, to the elements
that make us 'more than we are'. (My thanks
to Adrian Smith for his assistance as editor
and Arthur Butterworth and Mike Briggs as
advisors.) |