"There is no longer an avant-garde, political, sexual or artistic, embodying a capacity for anticipation; hence the possibility of any radical critique - whether in the name of desire, of revolution, or of the liberation of forms - no longer exists. The days of that revolutionary movement are gone. The glorious march of modernity has not led to the transformation of all values, as we once dreamed it would, but instead to a dispersal and involution of values whose upshot for us is total confusion - the impossibility of apprehending any determining principle, whether of an aesthetic, a sexual or a political kind.. (...) Communication 'occurs' by means of a sole instantaneous circuit, and for it to be 'good' communication it must take place fast - there is no time for silence. Silence is banished from our screens; it has no place in communication. Media images (and media texts resemble media images in every way) never fall silent: images and messages must follow one upon the other without interruption. But silence is exactly that - a blip in the circuitry, that minor catastrophe, that slip which, on television for instance, becomes highly meaningful - a break laden now with anxiety, now with jubilation, which confirms the fact all this communication is basically nothing but a rigid script, an uninterrupted fiction designed to free us not only from the void of the television screen but equally from the void of our own mental screen, whose images we wait on with the same fascination. (...) Art has disappeared as a symbolic pact, as something thus clearly distinct from that pure and simple production of aesthetic values, that proliferation of signs ad infinitum, that recycling of past and present forms, which we call 'culture'. There are no more fundamental rules, no more criteria of judgment or of pleasure. In the aesthetic realm of today there is no longer any God to recognize his own. Or, to use a different metaphor, there is no gold standard of aesthetic judgment or pleasure. That situation resembles that of a currency which may not be exchanged: it can only float, its only reference itself, impossible to convert into real value or wealth." |
Jean Baudrillard, The transparency of Evil, translated by James Benedict. pp 10, 12, 14. |
Ratio | Interval Name |
---|---|
1/1 (0 cents) | unison |
2/1 (1200 cents) | octave,diapason |
3/2 (701.955 cents) | fifth,diapente |
4/3 (498.045 cents) | fourth, diatessaron |
5/4 (386.314 cents) | third |
9/8 (203.910 cents) | second |
5/3 (884.359 cents) | sixth |
15/8 (1088.269 cents) | seventh |
A=220 to A=440. | ||
---|---|---|
Note | Freqency in Hz | Wavelength |
A3 | 1/220 | 0.00454 |
B3 | 1/246.9 | 0.00405 |
C4 | 1/261.6 | 0.00382 |
D4 | 1/293.7 | 0.00340 |
E4 | 1/329.6 | 0.00303 |
F4 | 1/349.2 | 0.00286 |
G4 | 1/392 | 0.00255 |
A4 | 1/440 | 0.00227 |
"There is a fundamental difference between a tone (in the dynamic, vital, magical, and/or sacred sense of the word) and a musical note as part of a scale (thus in relation to other notes). (...) Sound, tone and note each have a specific meaning, even though they may refer to the same auditory phenomenon. Each represents a different response to a musical event - a different way of feeling and thinking about what has been heard. Sound (in the non-metaphysical sense) simply refers to the transmission of vibratory motion and its perception by the auditory center in the brain after the various parts of the ears have resonated to it. A tone is a sound that has conveyed (or can convey) significant information to the consciousness of the hearer because it is charged with and transmits (or can transmit) the special nature and character of the source of the sound. Thus a tone is a meaning - carrying sound. A tone has meaning in itself, as a single phenomenon experienceable by a living being endowed with some degree of consciousness." |
Dane Rudhyar, The Magic of Tone and the Art of Music, p.13. |
"The common ground on which the postwar avant-garde met, transcending all their ideological differences, was tone. Call it also timbre, tone-quality, pure sound: it was that dimension of music which had been comparatively neglected during several centuries of harmonic, melodic and rhythmic exploration. (...) When Wagner first analyzed a tone in the Prelude to Rheingold, showing over eight minutes how it is made from the series of overtones in increasing density and rapidity of vibration, the first step had been takentowards a penetration by the listener of the single tone, as a microcosm to be explored in its own right." |
Joscelyn Godwin, Harmonies of Heaven and Earth, 120. |
"A music intending to communicate the psychic energy of actual tones could be called 'syntonic' music. It would be based on an experience of tone, unconstrained by the intellectual concepts of the classical tonality system or made difficult by the habits and memories of conditioning or academic training. (...) Tonal relationships are included in the space relationships of syntonic music, but the rules, patterns and cadences obligatory in a tonality-controlled music hinder the development of a syntonic consciousness. The restrictive patterns and formalism of a music controlled by the tonality-system undoubtedly have served as a valid purpose for the European culture and its American and global extension. Today, however, as all cultural traditions disintegrate, the use of precisely tuned scales and essentially separate notes having an abstract, intellectual existence on the background of empty space hides a psycho-musical inability to respond to the possibility allowing the full vibrancy of the whole musical space to inspire (or inspirit) a new consciousness of Tone. In syntonic music, because the fullness of the entire humanly experienceable musical space is the fundamental reality, any sound can be used as part of a sequence (melody) or simultaneity (chord) of sounds. But this does not mean the absence of selection in the composition of a particular work of music intended to communicate a particular state or fulfill a particular personal or collective function and purpose. What is selected is from the whole musical space, and that wholeness remains potentially involved in the resonance of the total work. The process of selection is an open process." |
Dane Rudhyar, 'Dissonant Harmony', Pleromas of Sound', Music Physician for Times to Come, an anthology by Don Campbell, p. 281. |
"Music is not usually Zen practice, but it can be, If the player just plays and becomes one with the playing it can be called Zen. But most of the time the direction is not clear in music. Usually there is some emotional control, some direction given by the emotions. And the musician may be trying to control the emotions of the audience. In fact, we speak of 'good music' as having this sort of effect on other people's emotions. Emotional music means opposites-mind: wanting or not wanting, good feeling, bad feeling. But true Zen music is different. It has been compared with the jumping of a fish up and own in the river." |
Seung Shan, Perceiving Universal Sound. Music Physician for Times to Come, an anthology by Don Campbell, p. 303. |
"The Logos of Creative Voice is personified as the goddess Vâch, the female aspect of Brahma, the God of Creation. Esoterically, she is the subjective creative force, which, emanating from the Creative Deity, becomes the manifested world of speech, i.e., the concrete expression of ideation, hence the Word or Logos. (...) The conception of Vâch plays a prominent part, not only in the Brahmanical system, but in the cosmogonies of most religions. It is the 'word made flesh' of the Bible; the 'nada' or soundless sound of the Upanishads; the 'nam' or 'gurbani' of the Sikh Adi Granth; the 'kalma-i-ilahi' or inner sound of the Koran; and the 'saute Surmadi' or 'hu' of Sufism. It is also synonymous with Platos' logos, with Madame Blavatsky's 'voice of the silence', with Patanjali's 'om', with the Pythagorean music of the spheres and with the lost word of masonry. (...) Buddhism knows it as 'fohat' - the light of the Logos. In Tibetan Buddhism it is related to the Bardo Thodol, while Chinese mysticism recognizes it as the 'kwan-yin-tien' or the 'melodious heaven of sound'." |
Gordon Limbrick, 'The Hidden Significance of Sound'. Music Physician for Times to Come, an anthology by Don Campbell. p. 308. |
"The Pythagorean scale is not a mode, for a mode is the product of special conditions belonging to the realm of culture and myth. The Pythagorean scale is an unconditioned, archetypal manifestation of cosmic principles. Number and proportions, as Pythagoras understood them, belong to the realm of archetype. In order to effectively operate in that realm man needs to develop a mind that has basically freed itself from bondage to biological energies and mythic-cultural specialization and exclusivism. When conceived by the archetypal mind, music can become, at least potentially, a universal, supercultural language." |
Gordon Limbrick, 'The Hidden Significance of Sound'. Music Physician for Times to Come, an anthology by Don Campbell. p. 308. |
Planetary frequencies are based on orbiting times: 24 hours for the Earth, 224 days for Venus, 4,332 days for Jupiter, etc. Rotations entail vibrations. In order to move from the planetary vibrations to those of our earthly music one must 'octavise' between 26 and 50 times - depending on the planet's distance from the sun. Our solar system thus covers a range of exactly ten octaves, exactly paralleling - in another of those miraculous suprises - our ear. (...) The ratio between time (still with reference to the Cousto method) and frequency is:Frequency = 1/TimeThe frequency produced by the Earth's orbit around the sun (365 1/4 days) is thus calculated by dividing 1 by 365 1/4. To make that frequency audible I must double it - i.e. octavise it - until I reach the sphere of tonal vibrations perceptible to our ears. (...) This is the most precise and most plausible of the many procedures discovered since Pythagoras for making audible the sounds made by the planets - the 'harmony of the spheres'." |
The Third Ear, by Joachim-Ernst Berendt, Element Books, 1988, p. 88. |