I feel like I should change the name of
this blog to the above title. I really am not an academic listener
when it comes to this music. I can barely tell an Etude from a
Concerto. I just play these discs, listen and react emotionally. In
other words – hopeless. Yet, I do listen and I do respond –
however unsophisticated-like (apologies to Thomas Dolby - he is way more sophisticated than the above picture might imply - I just happen to get a kick out of his expression here!).
Here's what I mean: I don't know what
it is, but I really know when I want to hear the Complete Schubert
Symphonies. And its not a matter of, say, just listening to
Schubert's 5th and being satisfied. Nope – I pull out
the whole kaboodle and spin 'em back to front, first to last in
order. Like it's one, big Symphonic Suite. I got in that mood today.
I really just needed to feel the vibrations of all those works in
order so I pulled my (most likely uncouth and disapproved-of) LP box
set of the Complete Schubert Symphonies conducted by Von Karajan with
the Berlin Philharmonic.
I would bet dollars to donuts there is
some online critique of this box set that does not merely border on
scathing, but takes scathing to new and exciting horizons of
expression. In fact, the only positive thing I've ever read about
Karajan relates to his Beethoven Symphony cycle from the early 60s on
D. Gramaphone.
I have that CD box set and it is quite
good. I also have a complete Schubert Symphony CD set with Nikolaus
Harnoncourt conducting which folks in the know consider pretty much
the “bees knees”.
Yet, handling physical records is like
“doing something” for me. One LP side per symphony in this set
(more or less) - it's like a physical interaction with the creative
element. Ritualistic. OCD-prone. Tough shit if you don't like
Karajan's Schubert cycle for some reason – I need to crank these
vibrations and flip records to feel better. That's how it is
sometimes. The music still sounds good to me. In fact, Schubert's
Symphonic cycle speaks to a certain level of.... some kind of bizarre
cross between Teutonic angst and heartache that makes the music
resonate for me.
Why Schubert? I don't know. I mean, I
like Beethoven too. Yet, Beethoven is too damned triumphant for me
sometimes. Schubert knew what its like to suffer in a different way.
Sure, Beethoven suffered – especially with the loss of his hearing.
But Schubert was cut down really early in his life. What a totally
unfair fate! Schubert's music is imbued with a “can you believe
what a dirty trick life is” kind of aesthetic. Every nook and
cranny betrays a sentiment reminding us how shitty it is to be young,
brilliant and DOOMED. Not that my circumstances are even remotely
similar. I just relate to it (maybe I just invented this shit in my
own mind – who can tell?).
In this way, it kind of reminds me of
(here it comes......) MAHLER. Where Mahler put all his emotions out
in front (ecstatic joy to bleak despair – often in the same
symphony), Schubert hides his true feelings behind flowery, consonant
passages. Yet, its when the music gets serious in between the flowery
stuff that a wicked contrast emerges. Makes the serious stuff sound
all the more tortured. And why tortured? Because Schubert was a
totally un-realized human being in spite of writing a bunch of great
music. He died at the age of 31 – some say from typhoid fever,
others say from complications due to syphilis (at a time when
ingesting mercury was considered a “cure”). It really boggles the
imagination how such complex and sophisticated music was composed at
a time when science and medicine had barely gotten out of the
starting gate. I guess humanity's willingness to think critically
and creatively about the natural world was not sufficiently
compelling against the (perhaps all too) pervasive forces of death.
It really is astonishing how many composers of the European tradition
in this era would succumb to syphilis. Add Schumann and Delius to the
list as well. Probably more.
Anyway – I also happen to like some
of Schubert's lieder – particularly the Winterreise collection. Do
I bother to read through the translation of the lyrics as it plays?
Hell, no. I just let it rip along in the German language that I don't
understand and try to catch the feeling. That's what I'm doing now.
Eventually I'll sit down with the words, but I figure it doesn't
matter unless I like the music first. Which I do, but I'm not to the
point where I have the flow of the pieces down. Unlike the
symphonies, oddly enough. I really didn't expect to like Schubert as
much as I do considering how I first heard about him.
As is plainly obvious to anybody
bothering to read this blog, I am really a rock and roll person. I
just got tired of the steady diet of rock, blues, jazz that I'd been
listening to forever and I wanted to hear mostly instrumental music
played by orchestras, string players and the like. So, as it happens,
the first I'd ever read about Schubert was on a Beatles album cover.
When I was a young lad (from about the age of 6 or so), I was a
Beatles fan. One of the first Beatles records I requested as a gift
was the Yellow Submarine album. Maybe I just wanted that song, maybe
I liked the cartoon cover art – I certainly would not have been as
enthusiastic about the record if I knew there was instrumental movie
music on side two. Yet, somehow I wasn't that upset since I enjoyed
playing that side almost as much as the Beatles music side. Maybe
this explains my interest in instrumental music now – who knows?
What is interesting about this Beatles
album is the fact that I somehow wound up with a UK import. It may
have been the only copy there – I can't remember. What I do
remember is how my little record player jumped on the first song
since there was a bit of a warp to the record. There was no returning
the thing so I lived with it. My first experience with the
limitations of both record players (the more likely culprit) and
vinyl. Yet, I still loved that record and played it often.
The reason I go into all of this
detail is because I eventually noticed a difference between my UK
Beatles Yellow Submarine album and the one my cousins had (which was
a US copy). On the back cover of the domestic release, there was a
little paragraph detailing the different characters in the animated
film along with the plot of the story.
On my UK copy, a totally different
essay was featured. It was an interesting review (written by
filmmaker Tony Palmer) of the White Album which had only come out the
previous November (Yellow Submarine was released in January of 1969).
In the review, Palmer compares the Lennon / McCartney songwriting
team to Schubert.
Years later, this bit of information
caused me to pick out a biography on Schubert from the library in my
elementary school (one of those biographies for kids kinda deals)
when we had to do a book report. I think I even managed to find a
Schubert record in the library just so I could hear something he
composed, but it was all way over my head then. Had I not gleaned
that name off the back cover of my UK Beatles Yellow
Submarine.......well, I wouldn't have chosen that book at any rate.
Thus was my first exposure to Schubert – unremarkable as it was.
And, interestingly enough, I don't have
all that much Schubert in my collection yet. Seems like old LPs
always feature the same pieces over and over. Which is also
fascinating when comparing to, say, Beethoven or Brahms. It is more
common to see a variety of works by those composers in the bins.
Maybe I'm just not seeing the right albums out there, but it makes me
wonder why there seems to be such a limited representation of
Schubert's work during the LP-era (relative to his written output).
Now, since I've been keeping this blog
I've covered all kinds of listening options – from open reel tapes
to downloads. It would seem to me that having access to quality
downloads opens the possibilities of hearing deeper material in any
given composer's output. And I know there are companies offering high
quality downloads. Yet it comes back to my preference of being able
to hold and manipulate something as part of the listening process.
Plus, I do like liner notes. I have been searching for a way to
bridge the two worlds – the ease of downloads and the fun of
physical product. So far it just isn't that compelling to use my
desktop computer as the listening device. Yet, there may be other
options on the horizon. I have been considering how newer technology
might create more compelling and meaningful interaction with music in
general - not just one genre. The option to access the deeper
recesses of any given composer's works (not to mention access to more
obscure music in general) is what gets my attention.
Earlier today I was home with the
family and as I was passing through the living room, a TV talkshow
program was on (not sure which). As I casually noticed, a musical
performance was about to happen which featured a young woman on
violin, a drummer behind a kit and a keyboard player. The violinist
was the focus, but perhaps not for the music since she simultaneously
jumped about dancing while playing. The fact that she was playing
music on a violin was not the main concern – the dancing was the
focus. And I thought – this is what it comes down to: if you want a
career playing an instrument, you'd better be prepared to dance
around a lot if you want anyone to notice you. The music is
inconsequential. Or irrelevant. Well, as ever I suppose. Even the
Beatles had to “mak-shau” in Hamburg to get work.
In some ways I have to cop to it. One
reason I enjoy this non-commercial, instrumental and sometimes old
music is because I want to believe in the imaginary world proposed by
these composers – the world of ideals, reason, enlightenment and
truth. Of course, in Schubert's own time there was no shortage of
earthly misery, inequality and ignorance. So too in our own time does
the news keep us up to date on the latest scandalous, treacherous and
barbaric behavior of medieval-minded miscreants. It is , in fact,
totally idiotic and irrelevant to think that somehow good art will
transform the world. But from a rock and roll point of view, the act
of making music for the sake of uplifting humanity is still – from
Schubert's time to ours, a noble enough pursuit – not to mention a
gigantic EEF EUU to said small-minded arseholes. So now, more than
ever – turn it up and play it loud, friends …. play it loud.