The "neo-classical" movement

“…simplification may be a necessity. The “neo-classical” movement had its inception in a reaction against over-complexity; but neo-classicists failed to see that the real necessity is to clarify the materials belonging to this age, not to attempt to return to the use of materials which not only have no specific relation to the present time, but were more perfectly handled by classical masters than is possible today. No renaissance in art has ever been entirely successful.”-

Henry Cowell-(New Musical Resources, 1930)

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Of interest: The Yossarian society

Here is an interesting website.

There is a new society being birthed.  Concerned with a number of things I would think, but right now the site has a good deal of focus on the plague of folks that would distract you from anything of actual importance in New Orleans, by endlessly attempting to suggest that sound ordinances are somehow a mark of great civilization- more than the culture of music!?!?!  

What can be said...Katrina courted throngs of people that have no idea and have fallen prey to some rich maniacs and carpetbaggers who are attempting to gain vast long term control over the profit systems in New Orleans.  But, it's surely the old Louisiana political story:  a new pipeline to fly high volumes of cash into a few local old pockets under the guise of renewal and a few beads for the new masses caught in the excitement.

Anyway, this mysterious

Yossarian Society

sheds more light than this brief rant-ette.

For instance, the Society says this... 


"Yossarian is entry level anarchism.

We like anarchism if it is funny. When it is a challenge, like Emma Goldman, not so much. So let’s try to start with some funny.

Yossarian’s philosophy is a first step. What happens when the Governing Caste slips its anchor? Yossarian pokes it in the eye."

 

     ...Can't be bad...who, after all, didn't get the tragic truths of 'Catch-22'.  If Heller could only see this world!

Stand here!- read this and get moving!

Rise Up or Die

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Posted on May 19, 2013
Illustration by Mr. Fish
 

By Chris Hedges

Joe Sacco and I spent two years reporting from the poorest pockets of the United States for our book “Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt.” We went into our nation’s impoverished “sacrifice zones”—the first areas forced to kneel before the dictates of the marketplace—to show what happens when unfettered corporate capitalism and ceaseless economic expansion no longer have external impediments. We wanted to illustrate what unrestrained corporate exploitation does to families, communities and the natural world. We wanted to challenge the reigning ideology of globalization and laissez-faire capitalism to illustrate what life becomes when human beings and the ecosystem are ruthlessly turned into commodities to exploit until exhaustion or collapse. And we wanted to expose as impotent the formal liberal and governmental institutions that once made reform possible, institutions no longer equipped with enough authority to check the assault of corporate power.

What has taken place in these sacrifice zones—in postindustrial cities such as Camden, N.J., and Detroit, in coalfields of southern West Virginia where mining companies blast off mountaintops, in Indian reservations where the demented project of limitless economic expansion and exploitation worked some of its earliest evil, and in produce fields where laborers often endure conditions that replicate slavery—is now happening to much of the rest of the country. These sacrifice zones succumbed first. You and I are next.

Corporations write our legislation. They control our systems of information. They manage the political theater of electoral politics and impose our educational curriculum. They have turned the judiciary into one of their wholly owned subsidiaries. They have decimated labor unions and other independent mass organizations, as well as having bought off the Democratic Party, which once defended the rights of workers. With the evisceration of piecemeal and incremental reform—the primary role of liberal, democratic institutions—we are left defenseless against corporate power.

The Department of Justice seizure of two months of records of phone calls to and from editors and reporters at The Associated Press is the latest in a series of dramatic assaults against our civil liberties. The DOJ move is part of an effort to hunt down the government official or officials who leaked information to the AP about the foiling of a plot to blow up a passenger jet. Information concerning phones of Associated Press bureaus in New York, Washington, D.C., and Hartford, Conn., as well as the home and mobile phones of editors and reporters, was secretly confiscated. This, along with measures such as the use of the Espionage Act against whistle-blowers, will put a deep freeze on all independent investigations into abuses of government and corporate power.

Seizing the AP phone logs is part of the corporate state’s broader efforts to silence all voices that defy the official narrative, the state’s Newspeak, and hide from public view the inner workings, lies and crimes of empire. The person or persons who provided the classified information to the AP will, if arrested, mostly likely be prosecuted under the Espionage Act. That law was never intended when it was instituted in 1917 to silence whistle-blowers. And from 1917 until Barack Obama took office in 2009 it was employed against whistle-blowers only three times, the first time against Daniel Ellsberg for leaking the Pentagon Papers in 1971. The Espionage Act has been used six times by the Obama administration against government whistle-blowers, includingThomas Drake.

 

The government’s fierce persecution of the press—an attack pressed by many of the governmental agencies that are arrayed against WikiLeaks, Bradley Manning, Julian Assange and activists such as Jeremy Hammond—dovetails with the government’s use of the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force to carry out the assassination of U.S. citizens; of the FISA Amendments Act, which retroactively makes legal what under our Constitution was once illegal—the warrantless wiretapping and monitoring of tens of millions of U.S. citizens; and of Section 1021 of the National Defense Authorization Act, which permits the government to have the military seize U.S. citizens, strip them of due process and hold them in indefinite detention. These measures, taken together, mean there are almost no civil liberties left.

Milan Kundera on Xenakis

From Total Rejection of Inheritance or, Who is Iannis Xenakis?- Milan Kundera(1980)

 

“Can his experiments with sounds and noises that are beyond notes and scales signal a new period in the history of music?  Will they remain in the memory of music lovers? No one can say for sure.  But what will survive for sure is this gesture of immense rejection: for the first time ever, someone dared to tell European music that it is possible to abandon it.  To forget it. (Is it a coincidence that during his youth, Xenakis lived through the massacres of a civil war, was condemned to death, his handsome face having been permanently marred by a wound, came to know human nature to a greater extent than any other composer?) And I think of the necessity, in the profound meaning of this necessity, which led Xenakis to choose the world’s objective sonority over the subjective one of a soul.”

Brecht- On the reading of plays

"The Threepenny Opera is concerned with bourgeois conceptions not only as content, by representing them, but also through the manner in which it does so.  It is a kind of report on life as any member of the audience would like to see it.  Since at the same time, however, he sees a good deal that he has no wish to see; since therefore he sees his wishes not merely fulfilled but also criticized (sees himself not as the subject but as the object), he is theoretically in a position to appoint a new function for the theatre.  But the theatre itself resists any alteration of that function, and so it seems desirable that the spectator should read plays whose aim is not merely to be performed in the theatre but to change it: out of mistrust of the theatre.  Today we see the theatre being given absolute priority over the actual plays."

- Bertolt Brecht 1927

XENAKIS

X: There you have pinpointed, and I congratulate you on it, a subject which has never been penetrated, that of the very essence of music; what is its role, its aim in present day society?  One might say "it's to pass the time", or "it's for pleasure", or "it's a spiritual diversion" when evaluating the nobility of classical works.  For contemporary ones "free intellectualism, exploration of the unknown etc."  The Pop song brings large rewards because it is consumed by the masses, it enters their souls, their lives, and stops there; one can very well do witout the musical questings of the avant-garde, one already has the musical past of Europe, which is not so bad; people keep discovering old bits of nonsense, mummies that they've dug up, and to hear all that could last a lifetime so what's the point of taking the prickly risks of a sortie into the contemporary world?  Musical exploration today is in the same state that mathematics was 80 years ago, when they were considered a crazy fantasy.  When Riemann started non-Euclidean geometry, people said it was a freak.  Now the result of these scientific researches is tangible enough today, and spectacular in the cosmic field.

MB: What consequences could musical research such as yours have in the distant future?

X: There are two answers to that.  First of all, if one approaches music in the same way that I approach mine, it marches with and intermingles with mathematics.  Mathematicians are beginning to appreciate this interaction and to react to it, making new propositions most beneficial on the purely material plane.  It is the widening of the horizons of the pioneers which gives birth to applications which are profitable to all.  The second answer concerns the importance that music can play in the achievement of man through his creative faculties.  If one allows these faculties the opportunity to develop, the whole of society is affected, and this will give to humanity an even richer knowledge, and therefore an ever greater mastery.

MB: Teilhard de Chardin expressed the hope that "the age would come when man will be more pre-occupied with knowing than having."

X: Music is certainly a basic tool for helping to fulfil this hope.  Pythagorism was born of music.  Pythagoras built arithmetic, the cult of numbers on musical foundations.  This is splendid; it is Orphic.  In Orphism music fulfills the function of the redeemer of souls in their escape from the infernal cycle of reincarnations.  If one wishes to be reborn on a higher plane one must look after one's soul.  This is to be found also in Homer; it is the Orphic thesis.  It is for religious reasons therefore that Pythagoras discovers the processes by which music is made, and then the relation between length of string and a note, and following that the association between sounds and numbers; moreover, as geometry was being born at the same period, Pythagoras interested himself in it.  By adding arithmetic to it he laid the foundations of modern mathematics; thus he was able to invade the realm of astronomy, invent the theory of the spheres, the theory of the music of the spheres, of the harmony of the spheres, which survived right up to Kepler; the Keplerian discoveries could never have been made but for the contribution of Pythagoras.  In the old days music therefore became, quite simply a branch of mathematics.  Euclid wrote an entire book called "Harmonics," in which he treated music on a theoretical level.  This was the position in the West right up to the middle ages: up to the end of the 9th century, when Hucbald, in his Musica Enchiriadis was analyzing plainchant and speaking of music in ancient classical terminology.  With the appearance of polyphony, there occured a divorce.. Today there are fewer reasons for upholding this divorce then for suppressing it.

MB: Isn't this to go against the stream in a reactionary way, which would be rather odd for a composer of the avant-garde, to hold that the mathematical theories of Pythagoras were engendered from a music that preceded them, and then today, 25 centuries later, to maintain that music should go back to mathematics?

X: Not at all.  Music is by definition an art of montage, a combinatory art, a "harmonic" art, and there is plenty to discover and to formulate in this domain.  I think I have defined two basic structures, one which belongs to a temporal category in musical thought, the other is independent of time, and its power of abstraction is enormous: ancient music was based on the extra-temporal, which allowed to be conjoined to mathematics; present-day music, since it is polyphonic, has almost dispensed with the extra-temporal factor in music, to the advantage of the temporal...the combination of voices, of modulations, melody, all this is made in time.  This music has lost, for example, all that it possessed of modal structure, which was based on tetrachords and "systems" and not on the octave scale; it has lost all that to the advantage of the temporal, that is to say of time-structures.
It is urgent now to forge new ways of thinking, so that the ancient structures (Greek and Byzantine) as well as the actual ones of the music of western countries, and also the musical traditions of other continents, such as Asia and Africa, should be included into an overall theoretic vision essentially based on extra-temporal structures.

MB: Since music gave birth to mathematics, ought it now to seek refuge in a return to mathematics?

X:  It isn't a refuge that music asks of mathematics, it is an absorption that it can make of certain parts of mathematics.  Music has to dominate mathematics, and without that it becomes either mathematics or nothing at all.  One should remain in the realm of music, but music need mathematics for they are a part of its body.  When Bach wrote the Art of the Fugue, he produced a combinatory technique which is mathematical.  In this new kind of music which I am propounding, and which at present is no more than the first hesitant stammering, mathematical logic and the machine will give a formidable power in the context of an extremely wide generalization.  Did you know that at the age of 16, in 1938, I tried to express Bach in a geometrical formulae?...but the war came...

MB: I want to come back to the public which is listening to you in the concert hall: there they all are, creasing up their foreheads over your programme-note  where, in presenting your work you cite Poisson's Law which you follow up with several algebraic equations.  Why do you bother to do all this?  Aren't you being a bit of a tease?

X: If the listener doesn't understand any of it, it is first of all useful to show him to himself as ignorant.  Because the laws which I cite are universal ones and treasures of humanity, real treasures of human thought.  To be unwilling to know them is as uncivilized as to refuse to recognize Michelangelo or Baudelaire.  Furthermore, these formulae, which 10 years ago were the property of only a specialist, are now the common property of the average student of elementary mathematics.  in a few years time they will be in every schoolboy's satchel.  The level of learning, this also evolves.  There exists an inner beauty in mathematics, beyond the enormous enrichment it brings to those who possess it, even a part of it; pure mathematics approaches poetry.

More Duchamp

"...I considered painting as a means of expression , not an end in itself. One means of expression among others, and not and not a complete end for life at all; in the same way I consider that color is only a means of expression in painting and not an end. In other words, painting should not be exclusively retinal or visual; it should have to do with the grey matter, with our urge for understanding.  This is generally what I love. I don't want to pin myself down to one little circle, and I tried at least to be as universal as I could."

-M Duchamp

From interview 1956

...this from Marcel Duchamp

"The question of shop windows [therefore]
To undergo the interrogation of shop windows [therefore]
The exigency of the shop window [therefore]
The shop window proof of the outside world [therefore]
When one undergoes the examination of the shop window, one also pronounces one's own sentence.  In fact, one's choice is "round trip."  From the demands of shop windows, from the inevitable response to shop windows, my choice is determined.  No obstinacy, ad absurdum, of hiding the coition through a glass pane with one or many objects of the shop window.  The penalty consists in cutting the pane and in feeling regret as possession is consummated. Q.E.D"

 

 

How about a little more Duchamp?

 

Question d'hygiene intime:
Faut-il mettre la moelle de l'épée dans l poil de l'aimée?

[Question of intimate hygiene:
Should you put the hilt of the foil in the quilt of the goil?]

 

and

 

Parmi nos articles de quincaillerie parasseusse, nous recommandons un robinet qui s'arrete de couler quand on ne l'ecoute pas.

[Among our articles of lazy hardware we recommend a faucet which stops dripping when nobody is listening to it.]

 

 

 

Augusto Boal- The Aesthetics of the Opressed

"No two rivers run exactly the same course, but water runs in all rivers - whether in the abundant Amazon or the smallest brook in the mountain. Their banks may be different, but all oppress the waters which run between them."

_________

Later speaking about TV and destructive media...

"It is not the violence per se which causes damage to the viewer, but the lack of rationale for this physical activity. When dealing with Rambo and other 'super-heroes' of this sub species, Empathy plays a very dangerous role. Empatheia, in Greek, means the vicarious experience of feelings and thoughts of others - characters in the performing arts, or a real person in daily life. This is especially potent when imposed by the Protagonist in Tragedy or passive spectators.

"When rational foundations of physical acts are not there, Empathy turns into a relationship of pure irrational animality. Continuous intimacy with brutality tends to form brutes. When a person lives in the wild in the company of savage predators, without human presence, how will that person be humanized? Children abandoned in the jungle never learn to smile. Violence in itself is neither good nor bad. Shakespeare is full of such things as the amputation of hands and the piercing of eyes. Violence is bad when unaccompanied by reason, when reduced to blows and punches, or supported only be simplistic, standard pre-conceived ideas. But it can be didactic when rationalized and when its causes and its Ethos are laid bare.

"This type of cinematography owes its mediocrity not to the lack of its authors creativity, but to the deliberate intention, by means of mechanical repetition, to block the intellectual development of its passive audiences, and stunt their capacity to to create and to think in metaphor.

"Stanley Kubrick's marvellous Full Metal Jacket shows with aesthetic perfection the ultra-military process by which peremptory orders to obey and to kill oare implanted in the brains of army recruits. What the talented director demonstrates in this military example is the same process as occurs on TV for civilians, far from civilised as it is."

From The Aesthetics of the Oppresed by Augusto Boal

Striving for liberation

I strive for: complete liberation from all forms
from all symbols
of cohesion and
of logic.
Thus:
away with 'motivic working out'.
Away with harmony as
cement or bricks of a building.
Harmony is expression 
and nothing else.
Then: 
Away with Pathos!
Away with protracted ten-ton scores, from erected or constructed
towers, rocks and other massive claptrap.
My music must be
brief
Concise! In two notes: not built, but 'expressed'!! 
And the results I wish for:
no stylized and sterile protracted emotion.
People are not like that:
it is impossible for a person to have only one sensation at a time.
One has thousands simultaneously. And these thousands can no
more readily be added than an apple and a pear.  They go
their own ways.
And this variegation, this multifariousness, this illogicality which
our senses demonstrate, the illogicality presented by their interactions,
set forth by some mounting rush of blood, by some reaction of the
senses or the nerves, this I should like to have in my music.
It should be an expression of feeling, as our feelings, which bring
us in contact with our subconscious,really are, and no false
child of feelings and "conscious logic."

-Arnold Schoenberg to Ferrucio Busoni 1909

 
 

Friends! any confidence?

"The transaction concluded, the two still remained seated, falling into familiar conversation, by degrees verging into that confidential sort of sympathetic silence, the last refinement and luxury of unaffected good feeling.  A kind of social superstition, to suppose that to be truly friendly one must be saying friendly words all the time, any more than to be doing friendly deeds continually.  True friendliness, like true religion, being in a sort independent of works."- The Confidence Man by Herman Melville

"If a drunkard..."

"If a drunkard in a sober fit is the dullest of mortals, an enthusiast in a reason fit is not the most lively.  And this, without prejudice to his greatly improved understanding; for, if in his elation was the height of his madness, his despondency is but the extreme of his sanity."- Herman Melville from The Confidence Man: His Masquerade