Saturday, December 21, 2024

Rick Beato has a video on "The Death of Music Genres" which reminds me that as the loss of mono-genre dominance goes Leonard Meyer called it back in 1967 with classical music

The Death of Music Genres

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D-h_OHhtvPU

 

As Kyle Gann put it, back in 1967 when Leonard Meyer published a book proposing the death of any single genre in music being the norm (in classical music) it was greeted with controversy.   Gann quoted Meyer saying the following:

I should like to suggest - and, considering the rapidity and frequency with which styles have followed one another in recent years, the suggestion will probably seem a rash one - that the coming epoch (if, indeed, we are not already in it) will be a period of stylistic stasis, a period characterized not by the linear, cumulative development of a single fundamental style, but by the coexistence of a multiplicity of quite different styles in a fluctuating and dynamic steady-state.

That was in 1967.  Gann noted a bit dryly that while this was a revolutionary suggestion that the “present” of music indicated a post-genre “future” academic musicology did not get together and hail Meyer’s idea as prescient or accurate.  Gann said that what actually happened was stuff like playing Handel on 200-year-old woodwinds and looking at Fanny Mendelssohn and looking at the influence of minstrelsy on Broadway musicals.  In other words, academics stuck to their ruts and lanes and did not think through the implications of every style and form of music the world over being able to exist simultaneously in a potentially synergistic poly-stylistic steady-state.

 

https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/M/bo3629352.html

Music, the Arts, and Ideas: Patterns and Predictions in Twentieth-Century Culture

Leonard B. Meyer

ISBN: 9780226521435

ISBN: 9780226521442

ISBN: 9780226521442

 

But suppose the paradigm which posits cumulative change and the discovery of a common style is no longer pertinent and viable? Perhaps none of the "revolutions" will be definitive; then astonishment would disappear. Suppose, too, that there are no "imperatives" of the sort that Boulez assumes (Whose imperatives? What is "our time" but the totality of actions, including art works, that take place in it?), and, consequently, that no style is necessarily superfluous. Suppose, in short, that the present pluralism of coexisting styles (each with its particular premises and even its attendant ideology) represents not an anomalous, transient state of affairs, but a relatively stable and enduring one.

 

I am suggesting not only that such a hypothesis is neither theoretically absurd no empirically impossible but that, once it is adopted, seemingly incompatible pieces of the puzzling present begins to form an intelligible pattern. If our time appears to be one of "crisis," it does so largely because we have misunderstood the present situation and its possible consequences. Because a past paradigm has led us to expect a monolithic, all-encompassing style, the cultural situation has seemed bizarre and perplexing. The "crisis" dissolves when the possibility of a continuing stylistic coexistence is recognized and the delights of diversity are admitted. The question then becomes not is this style going to be THE STYLE, but is this particular work well-made, challenging, and enjoyable.    pages 171-172

 

Kyle Gann has elsewhere noted (back in 2007) that it seemed after the mid-1980s the collective academic narrative stalled. Whereas composers and musicologists were holding forth on what was probably going to happen or “ought” to happen in the horizons of music by the 1990s and early 2000s there was not much of anything by way of sweeping histories or manifestoes.

https://www.kylegann.com/PC070425-NarrativeInterrupted.html

 

Okay, maybe, but Richard Taruskin’s Oxford History of Western Music was (and is) pretty sweeping. Of course it began as a funereal observance that mutated into a more chastened observation that classical music isn’t dying, just changing.

 

Rick Beato’s video lingers in my mind as a rock (though not necessarily rockist) variation on an observation about the “death” of genre Leonard Meyer observed in what’s colloquially called classical music back in 1967.

 

Bryan Townsend had some thoughts about Beato’s recent video and, among other things, wrote “I think it is better that we develop our own musical taste rather than have it curated for us.”  Sure, but as I hear Beato’s thoughts I think he’s coming at this more from the angle of exposure and not the angle of curation.  As William Deresiewicz put it in The Death of the Artist: How Creators Are Struggling to Survive in the Age of Billionaires and Big Tech it’s easier than ever to get published and harder and harder to get monetized for publication.  In yet another nod to the notion that artists are the prophet-priest-seer-king-moral-legislators of civilization we got an account of how part of the crisis in the humanities is that the writers and poets and artists who could tell us like it is and help us be those cussed individuals upon which free societies rely can’t make ends meet enough to keep doing what they do.

 

Part of me was sympathetic and part of me was curious enough to pick up Excellent Sheep but a big part of me thinks “Well, cry me a river.”  Larry Shiner has pointed out that the whole notion of fine arts as defined in art history is a recent innovation and invention that can’t even square with how the arts were actually practiced in, say, the Renaissance.  If the Artist as imagined since the Romantic era wasn’t even how Leonardo worked with other artists then the “death” of such an artist maybe isn’t as catastrophic or significant as vocational arts scholars and literary theorists make it out to be.  Sure, someone like Norman Lebrecht has been bewailing the death of criticism but Jacques Ellul pointed out in The Empire of Non-Sense that most of human history rolled along just fine with no arts critics to serve as brokers for patrons.  Who were the critics at newspapers who made Bach and Haydn and Mozart that musical touchstones they became in chamber music?  Well, hey, if autonomous art transcends constraints and all who needs to cheer for new music?  The good stuff will be found out and we could just gut music education and patronage systems and just trust all the hard-working musicians will just somehow get heard, right?

 

The reductio ad absurdum speaks for itself, and yet the death of genre hardly seems like it is necessarily a problem.  My own conviction has been that if there has been a death of genre over the last century in pop music there has been a diffusion of “focus” in classical music, too.  The simultaneous co-existence of every style and form is hardly a problem.  Richard Taruskin made a passing comment in The Ox about how back in the 18th century there were tons of musical forms and styles and genres and yet nobody thought of the Baroque era as a rat’s nest of musical incoherence because every genre and form and style existed within and for a clearly socially articulated social use.

 

Social use, you say?  Isn’t that reducing art to mere servitude?  Adorno contended in Aesthetic Theory that the “liberation” of art from theology and from service to throne and altar created a crisis of purpose from which and to which “art” has zero answers.  Jacques Ellul, for his part, wrote that Adorno correctly grasp the aporia of modern arts, that they are either reduced to being propaganda on behalf of a state or cultural norm on the one hand or devolving into hermetically isolated technocratic experimentation for its own sake that can only ever appeal to insular coteries on the other.  “Pop”, however we define it, has always been music created in the sausage factory for writers like Adorno.  But Adorno created a double bind in which tonality was “used up” but pop music had no capacity for large-scale forms and yet the large-scale forms that had been the domain of “classical music” were obsolete because in the wake of the presumed death of tonality (and with the advent of the equal tempered tuning system) nobody could legitimately write rondos any longer. 

 

As I was saying earlier, Rick Beato’s concern is that nothing can become a big enough of a hit to create social cohesion if nothing is big enough to catch on.  I take Bryan Townsend’s point that Taylor Swift is popular and well-known and that a crack team of pop-meisters from Sweden tend to dominate.  This has been taking shape since the Clinton administration and got discussed a bit in John Seabrook’s The Song Machine.

 

Leonard Meyer floated a few ideas about what might happen moving on from 1967 in Music, the Arts, and Ideas: 

 

The ideal of individualism and the goal of intense personal expression have now been repudiated by two of the important ideologies of our time and have been derogated by some traditional artists. In their place has been substituted the concept of the work of art as an objective construct. Originality is no longer tied to the discovery of means expressive of an artist's inner experience, but to the ordering of materials; and creativity is seen not as an act of self-revelation, but as a species of problem-solving. Since any style can constitute a basis for objective construction and for the presentation of principles of order, such views are not incompatible with the use of past art works as sources for materials, relational patterns, and syntactic procedures and norms. Form and technique have thus superseded inspiration and expression. Logically, all modes of organization and all styles become equally available and viable.    page 188

 

Well, to that I’d say Meyer was wrong.  Ted Gioia has called for Romanticism 2.0 and the emergence of a new counterculture.  I say we don’t need Romanticism 2.0 because Meyer correctly said we never got out of Romanticism 1.0!  Meyer suggested that the kinds of artists he called formalists were most likely to become the heroes of their day but what would that entail?  I think inspiration and expression are not going to go out of style but I do think Meyer was on to something noting the loss of a shared vocabulary within which “expression” could be taken as given. If we look at this next suggestion by Meyer it could be read, here in 2024, as an anticipation of mash-up culture, sampling, pastiche and other recombinant approaches to genre:

 

If a work of art is an impersonal construct, and creation a kind of problem-solving, then experiments with mixtures of means and materials, either within or between works, need not constitute an imperfection. On the contrary, the skillful and elegant combinations of disparate styles (or of ideas borrowed from different works and different composers) within a single work may become a challenging and attractive problem.   pages 190-191

 

 

... if earlier styles and materials are employed in contemporary art, music and literature, it will most likely be done by those inclined toward formalism, rather than by those who still consider works of art to be vehicles for personal expression. One cannot "use" the expressive quality of a Bach, a Rembrandt, or a Donne. ... In like manner, it will probably be the formalist rather than the expressionist who delights in the possibilities of mixing styles and materials from different epochs within a work or in employing different stylistic models in successive works.

...

 

That this is indeed the case is shown by the fact that it has been avowed and explicit formalists, such as Eliot and Stravinsky, who have employed past procedures, models, and materials most patently and most extensively. And we are thus confronted with an amusing paradox: the end of the Renaissance--of belief in teleology, individualism, expression, and so forth--has made possible a return to the styles and materials originally fostered by those beliefs.   ...  page 191

 

 

...  If this analysis is correct, it should follow that in the future a particular past will be favored and explored because of the specifically artistic problems it poses rather than because of the ideological position it represents.   page 193

 

 

Star Wars hadn’t even happened yet and certainly not steampunk as a subgenre within manga.   Meyer’s examples of T. S. Eliot and Igor Stravinsky as the arch-formalists of the 20th century in poetry and music were well-chosen because they were both fond of formal explorations and genre blurring gestures. 

 

My personal interest has been in looking at the ways in which “pop” and “classical” reception histories among academics have tended to balkanize.  Poptimist and rockist approaches exist in pop and classical.  The “back to roots” types want their pet genre “redeemed” by being purged of extraneous or defiling elements.  We don’t have to look too far within classical music for the formerly-named Future Symphony Institute.  Among fans of rock the back-to-basic guys tend to announce themselves. 

 

The death of music genres that Rick Beato has observed can certainly be a real thing but he noticed (I suspect) that this has been happening for a while.  Leonard Meyer noticed it had been happening in the mid-20th century. 

 

We’re better off if we allow genres and styles to be treated as flexible realms of the possible.  The demise of grunge doesn’t see me shedding any tears.  I actually hated most grunge but I’m not going to hold it against Rick Beato if he loves the style.  He loves Stevie Wonder so we can agree on that.  And here we are half a century from Innervisions and people still love “Superstition” and if people are even listening to Cornelius Cardew or Stockhausen, well, okay.


4 comments:

chris s said...

Rick's also commenting on a fairly unique period of time where economic growth meant that both consumption and production of art had been democratised (albeit in limited ways, and mainly in the West and a few outposts in the Global South), which in turn interacted with different cultural practises of different parts of society.

As well as the homogenisation at the top, there's also been a fairly severe homogenisation at the input stage.

Wenatchee the Hatchet said...

True, he's talking about a specific period.

Your comment reminds me of Frank Zappa's comment that in the mid-20th century in the US there was a brief period between the end of WW2 and the 1960s where the music industry had no idea what would sell so they ran with anything and everything and just let the chips fall where they might.
By the 1970s they had figured out what WOULD sell and began to lock down what they allowed past the initial gates of entrance for the music industry.

Homogenisation at the input stage could be what "revives" genre. ;) If everyone's strumming the same four chords ... although ...

A friend was saying ZZ Top showed you can go decades with just three chords a few weeks ago. I don't agree. There's way more than a mere three chords in songs like "La Grange" or even "Cheap Sunglasses". This is a point Ethan's made at his blog that pop songs that people might presume are utterly simple are not actually simple at all.

I haven't tackled guitar sonatas from South American composers like I had hoped but they can be interesting case studies about how the boundaries between pop and classical are way, way more permeable in the South than the North. There were times reading Ewell's book I got to thinking about that and how nobody in the North has seemed to write about the guitar sonatas of Ponce or Guastavino. I don't know if I've got the energy or focus as my Matiegka project has stalled at Grand Sonata II to tackle their sonatas at the blog.

chris s said...

Or indeed Lauro.

Though to return a bit to the point about pop structures and a tangent I omitted earlier; at least some of those structures were down to songwriters working behind the scenes who were otherwise denied an outlet for their talents so at least that was the flip side of many of those boy bands marketed to young girls in particular. The Swiftian contrast is a point heard elsewhere, in that the flip side of Swiftie dominance is that it's one of the few times when girls of that age were in the main listening to something actually made by a female artist.

Wenatchee the Hatchet said...

I need to get to Lauro's work and thankfully Brilliant Classics has been fantastic at mining the classical guitar literature for new releases of guitarist composers who are often ignored altogether by mainstream classical music.

I vaguely recall Ethan Hein mentioning that our era of pop is actually dominated by a couple of guys (Max Martin and the other name escapes me). Girls listening to something made by a female artist is a good point, although with Swift I have seen objections that amount to suggesting she's a kind of patron/brand.

But then rubrics of authenticity can be slippery. I just saw that Buffie St. Marie was stripped of some honors posthumously. If Swift is a brand/patroness who has songs made for her that is what some biblical scholars have suggested about the authorship of the Davidic psalms, after all.