Music As Information
by Harvey Reid
With the advent of audio and video, music can travel farther, faster, and
better than ever before. It may be that in the days before recordings, which
purists somehow feel was better than today, there were many more obstacles
in the way of learning, like the way that books and writing may have improved
language. No doubt there were people then who felt that writing was going
to be the end of language as they knew it, although we don't know much of
the world as they knw it unless they wrote it down. It's getting that waay
with music. If it is not filmed or recorded, it might well have never happened,
and the oral traditions of music are dying just as they are in language
and history.
You no longer have to live in a particular place and at a particular time
in history to get access to its cultural information, and the period when
musical information could only be stored in the human brain and on the written
page is ending. They preserved the written word of Latin, but no one knows
how to pronounce anything. When the first Japanese Bluegrass band, The Bluegrass
45, came over the the U.S., they caused a sensation in the Bluegrass world,
because they were actually quite good. And how is it that Yo Yo Ma plays
Bach, and Christopher Parkening plays Spanish guitar? And now there are
Russians and Czechs who play Bluegrass, and Australian Blues Men, and possibly
we have only begun to see the proliferation of cross-cultural musicianship.
How can this be? Are they real Blues men or just actors? What if their learning
techniques were the same? What if a Black man from Mississippi takes up
Blues theater? Is he more "authentic" than the Australian? I think
it is largely a matter of information. Most players in the U.S. today learn
from recordings, rather than by tagging along behind the masters on the
street corners, so that is the sort of thing that can be done just as easily
by a Romanian with a record player as someone from Atlanta. The Age of Information
is making it easier for almost anyone to do an quite commendable job of
mastering a particular style of music as long as it has been previously
documented in recordings, though the deeper question of the authenticity
of the result remains.
Maybe this offends our nationalistic sensibilities, but ultimately it is
good for the preservation of the music, and the styles of playing are more
likely to survive and grow in an information-rich environment. How many
brilliant musicians came and went in their small villages, unknown to the
rest of the world? Face it, the whole folk process is just a matter of information
transmittal. A traveling fiddler came through town, played his stuff, and
the players who heard him got what they could from hearing him, depending
on their ability to remember. The difference is that now you can make a
tape or a video, and capture exactly what was being done, and then you could
only remember snippets, so musical ideas and plots of songs and catchy lines
moved through the people who played and heard them, and were constantly
changed. This process of endless variation through inaccurate remembering
is the heart of the Folk Process, but it must have been tough for somebody
who actually wrote a song, to have people stealing it and changing it everywhere
he went. At least creators now can get some credit for what they do, copyright
it, and people can learn it correctly if they so choose.
Copyright © 1995 by Harvey
Reid
Harvey Reid has been a full-time acoustic
guitar player, songwriter, traditional musician, and free-lance minstrel
since 1974. He has recently released his 11th solo recording on Woodpecker
Records. He lives on the coast of Southern Maine, though he did live
in his car for over 5 years, which made him philosophical.
WOODPECKER MULTIMEDIA
5 Fernald Ave York
Maine 03909 USA
phone (207) 363-1886
This web site
concerns the music and life of acoustic musician, writer & music educator Harvey Reid.
If
you don't find what you want, or if you have comments or questions, please email
to
WOODPECKER MULTIMEDIA
5 Fernald Ave York
Maine 03909 USA
phone (207) 363-1886
This web site
concerns the music and life of acoustic musician, writer & music educator Harvey Reid.
If
you don't find what you want, or if you have comments or questions, please email
to