To convey a composer’s message to the cognizing listener, to communicate truth through music, insight is not necessarily required on the side of the performer.
And it proves the farsightedness of our great classical composers that they succeeded not only in forming a language which is, for the most part, independent of the individual insight of an interpreter, but also in making it the accepted standard.
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THE CLASSICAL COMPOSER AND MUSICOLOGIST PETER HÜBNER
on his International Project of the INTEGRATION OF SCIENCES & ARTS
on his International Project of the INTEGRATION OF SCIENCES & ARTS
The Freedom of the Musical Meaning |
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The Direct Communication of Truth from the Composer to the Listener |
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An analogy may further explain this statement: a Turk, who grew up in America, reads Goethe’s “Faust” to a German in China. Indeed, the Turk has learned reading by common methods. However, the excerpts he reads out from “Faust” will not always be readily understandable, and the German listener, not quite enthused about the pronunciation, will not regard it as a piece of art. But even despite the shortcomings of the pronunciation, the words reach the listener, and Goethe’s message comes through. |
Interpretation and Musical Truth |
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In the same manner, our time clads the messages of the great composers of the past into the language of today’s interpretation which breathes the clatter of machines. And from the very fact that the performer is so successful among the masses today one may conclude that he applies the machine-language of our time particularly obtrusively. |
The Secret Radiance of the Musical Truth |
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Skilfully and inconspicuously he blends the noises of day-to-day routine into the language of the orchestra. But even then, truth manages to shine through this machinistic language so popular today even if only like a very little candle in a very big dark room. |
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The description of each level of nature requires its own degree of perfection, that perfection which is typical for the level of nature being described. Unfortunately, the orchestral language of today is therefore only qualified to describe, to some extent authentically, the world of physics or chemistry i.e. the world of unenlivened ecology and, at most, the structure of that which medicine deals with today in the field of physiology. |
Structural Fundamentals of the Musical Description |
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In the orchestral routine of today, the higher musical orders that are represented in the musical scores of the great composers can be applied just as little as a big hoist with its huge booms is suited to show someone a fine golden ring, decorated with subtly cut diamonds, without destroying the ring and moreover, without dragging the whole scene into the grotesque. |
Higher Languages in Music |
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So, the musician must structurally and functionally adapt his outer means of describing the truth, his articulation to the structural organization of the composition in order to adequately render the message. |
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