/0/86395/coverorgin.jpg?v=55bb4b33b13d15db79b49aea662af755&imageMogr2/format/webp)
The art of music shows the operation of several moving forces, or motives, which have presented themselves to the composer with sufficient force to inspire the creation of the works we have. The most important of these motives is the Musical Sense itself, since it is to this we owe the creation of the folk-song, with its pleasing symmetries, and the greater part of the vast literature of instrumental music.
Aside from the expression of the musical consciousness as such, the composer has been moved at times by the motive of Dramatic Expression. In opera, for example, a great deal of the music has for its object to intensify the feeling of the scene. Accordingly, the composer carefully selects those combinations and sequences of tones which in his opinion best correspond with the dramatic moment they are intended to accompany. And since many of these moments are of extreme intensity, even tragic in character, very strong and intense combinations of tones are sometimes employed, such as could not be justified in an instrumental composition to be played independently of any illustrative scenery or story.
There is a third motive of composition which also has had a large place in the development of instrumental music-viz., the Expression of the Individual Mood of the Composer; and the further we come down in the history of music, the more unrestricted we find the operation of this motive.
In the order of development, the purely musical is entitled to the first place; and it has also been the principal moving cause in the development of the art of music, from its universality-its power to act upon all grades of musical consciousness according to the ability of the individual musician. For example, the desire to realize in tones agreeable symmetries of rhythm and strong antitheses of melodic sequence has given rise to the folk songs, all of which operate upon what are now very elementary lines, since they never exceed very simple and obvious rhythmic proportions and the most common chords of the key.
Recent investigations of the music of barbarous and half-civilized tribes show that the attainment of symmetry in the folk-song is a somewhat late experience. In many of the songs of the American Indians, for example, the first phrase moves practically along the track of the common chord; the second phrase frequently repeats the first, and in some instances the repetition goes on indefinitely without any answer or conclusion. In other cases a second phrase follows along the track of a closely related chord, but I have never noticed a case in which a third phrase appeared, corresponding to the first, after a digression of the second phrase into another chord. Generally the rhythm runs out with a series of what might be called inarticulate drum-beats, as if an impulse existed still unsatisfied, blindly making itself felt in these insignificant pulsations; an impulse which a finer melodic sense would have satisfied by the proper antithesis in relation to the first phrase, thus leaving the melody and the rhythm to complete themselves together, as always takes place in civilized music.
The art of music seems to be an evolution from the sense of number and the feeling for the common chord, combined with a certain fondness for reverie, which in the earlier stages of the art was perhaps semi-religious in character, and in the later stages is more nearly related to the dance, until finally, in the highest stage, it is a reverie of the beautiful or the pathetic, pure and simple. The existence of the harmonic sense in rude natures, where music has not been heard, seems very difficult to account for, since, while it is true that any resonant tone contains the partial tones constituting the common chord, a resonant tone is very seldom heard among rude surroundings; and the discovery of the instinct of barbarous melodies to work themselves along the track of the chord is one of those unexpected finds of modern investigation which, while at first seeming to explain many things, are themselves excessively difficult to account for.
In a sense, there is no difference in kind between the folk-song and the most complete and highly organized art-music; that is to say, both alike are primarily due to the operation of simple musical instincts working off along the track of rhythmic proportion and harmonic relation. The vast difference in the grade of the results attained is due to the capacity of the composers. The simple man giving himself up to reverie and being gifted with a certain amount of musical feeling, produces a commonplace melody of serious import or of lively rhythm according to the nature of the reverie in which he indulges. This is to him a complete expression of his mood, and it is received as such by others in like state.
A Bach, a Beethoven, or a Schumann, giving himself up to tonal reverie, will also arrive at more or less symmetrical melodic forms proportionate to the mood of the composer and the idea which he is seeking to bring to expression; but instead of his reverie terminating at the end of one or two periods, as is invariably the case with the simple man (an additional idea having to be sought with much diligence and imperfect success), he goes on for a series of periods, and perhaps develops a quite long discourse, all having relation to the simple conception with which he started and to a fundamental mood. It is evident that, owing to the time consumed in writing out a musical discourse, the high composer will not have been able to complete his composition, or at least the written expression of it, at a single sitting; and upon examining it we do, in fact, find it to consist of successive chapters or paragraphs, each one of which might be taken as the expression of a mood, and all having reference to the central mood underlying the beginning, which by the arrangement of material necessarily becomes the characteristic mood of the entire work.
Moreover, Bach, Beethoven, or Schumann, in bringing their tonal mood to expression, will permit themselves all sorts of freedom in bringing together unexpected motives, rhythms, or chords, and the result, consequently, will be of a very different character from that attained by the composer of simple pieces, and will, therefore, be intelligible to those only who have the musical capacity to realize these more remote and less obvious relations.
/0/16424/coverorgin.jpg?v=90f07c5b40b45ecd16014d77de1f90d5&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/28010/coverorgin.jpg?v=20220810143932&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/61847/coverorgin.jpg?v=7a2abe710605a38a0b0ddfbd6dca7af8&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/3604/coverorgin.jpg?v=5425c71d898a6b4331d7153381eb4638&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/16547/coverorgin.jpg?v=56c8438cc248a71bcc2ea4b4c8af87c5&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/14767/coverorgin.jpg?v=74c467b19d1f8d939bcb8f7325ae09e1&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/24675/coverorgin.jpg?v=3b2936bc7014605009774f58a7890c49&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/18465/coverorgin.jpg?v=076f87927c32373a183be93609eac3d5&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/15447/coverorgin.jpg?v=dca00f091a13327cba9446c7dd08b0e6&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/1438/coverorgin.jpg?v=20210813190542&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/34953/coverorgin.jpg?v=20230201180658&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/22736/coverorgin.jpg?v=ddf7920e00d894a44dd28735ef745a98&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/48669/coverorgin.jpg?v=25e1ad6e16d8b74e6b7f12ecac4854dc&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/26067/coverorgin.jpg?v=20240202102157&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/20034/coverorgin.jpg?v=ee43314ac5a4e83670c4088ac1e60786&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/51785/coverorgin.jpg?v=94b00673253b53639d6be545019dfd40&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/52034/coverorgin.jpg?v=d632bf45836ac000a0878458d160d080&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/56111/coverorgin.jpg?v=b25dea5f81861cf7300d9cd3ac57d892&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/60090/coverorgin.jpg?v=d098616a01d7a74e961847389431e0f1&imageMogr2/format/webp)