Where Does Music Come From?

'Where [does music] come from? I do not know and have nothing to do with it!' - Mozart

Many songwriters feel the same - and while it's a common belief that music bubbles up from an undiscoverable mountain spring - to attribute creative ideas (any ideas!) to supernatural forces is both a cop out and a dead end.

But, yeah - that moment you first play the entire virgin song - the lyrics and music which simply weren't there until you brought them into being - that moment is transcendent, thrilling, awesome. It's easy to be a believer.

For me, it beats any satisfaction I get from my job, chasing women, getting lashed, writing my novel - or even eating a damn fine curry.

In fact, it even surpasses listening to others' music.

Just.

"Music so wishes to be heard that it sometimes calls on unlikely characters to give it voice" - Robert Fripp

Robert's suggesting here that you serve the music - that the arrangement and performance of the music, the music as an independent entity with a will of its own, is something out of your hands. It's another common idea. And yes - any music worth its salt is service. Not as an entity, though, but like Michelangelo feeling his way through the marble to where the ideal of the statue awaits. That's the impulse you serve.

And there are musicians who serve the song, and ones who don't.

As a simple test - get a copy of a song in the original (Behind Blue Eyes by The Who, for example) and compare it to any recent cover version. See what I mean? Philosophy counts.

Whether you're Machiavelli, Mozart or Michelangelo, there are many approaches to creating art.

Over intermittent blogs, I'll be mapping how it's done in music, with a bouillabaisse of participation, anecdote, theory, history, comment, gear and a love of the highest artform - music.

Tres

Roquing In The Free World

While still a blog noob, this page will be under some squeaks n tweaks til it looks like it can perambulate sans adult supervision.

Check out the groovy StumbleUpon features you can add to your own blog, and check out my running list - just hit the thumbs up button at the foot of the page.

StumbleUpon bypasses the usual tat with your own interest prefs - which grow as you use it - and you get to give the thumbs up or down on what you stumble on. Intelligent content for a memeingful life.

I quickly stumbled onto this cool online jukebox - finetune.

You can use it two ways - either sign up yourself - or visit this blog for my running list. Have this page open in a tab, kick back and keep on Roquing in the free world.

Tres Roque