Sex, politics, religion - and music. Jack
Body Massey University Composer Address 1999 I
was born in a small New Zealand country town, the last of four children and the
only son. My sisters were considerably older than me, and so I had a rather solitary
childhood. I amused myself by making things. I always remember trying to keep
out of my mother's way, because as soon as she saw me she'd find some useful household
chore for me to do. Since my sisters had all had piano lessons I, too, wanted
to learn. Although it was obvious I was never destined to become a concert pianist
I was fascinated by music, not only as sound that could be played and listened
to, but also by the notation, a kind of secret symbolic language. I remember the
sense of wonder I felt when I was given my first volume of Beethoven sonatas,
which contained a very romanticised portrait of the composer as a frontispiece.
So this is what a composer looked like, wild haired and with a surly glare! I
clutched the book close and stroked its cover. (Years later I had a student who
told me that when he got hold of his first Beethoven score, he ate the pages.
Although I didn't quite believe him, I understood his feeling! We had fallen in
love with the idea of being a composer.) I think I must have been
a fairly characterless child, a seen-but-not-heard kind of child. I seldom argued,
or spoke out, but I definitely had a stubborn streak. I always say, "Yes,
Mum", and then go off and do whatever it was I had in mind. I was an individualist,
but I also avoided confrontation. I can't see the rhyme or reason of astrology
but the truth is I am a classic Libran. (Years later, when I went to live in Java
for two years, I felt very at ease in this culture where one never expresses oneself
directly or emphatically, and where raised voices and physical confrontation are
considered demeaning. In New Zealand emotional inhibition is a national
malady. Men, particularly, are discouraged from giving expression to their emotions,
except perhaps their feelings of violence and aggression, which is such an essential
ingredient in the game of rugby. But tears? - these definitely had to be suppressed.
I remember struggling to keep my weeping silent, as I sobbed myself to sleep during
the first months at boarding school, the result of which I seem to have altogether
lost the capacity to cry freely, without restraint. In many ways I am
grateful for having been sent to boarding school, for although the separation
from the family fold seemed sudden and brutal at the time, it forced on me a sense
of independence, something than many adolescents have a long struggle to achieve.
I was alone. I had to "create myself". I was a very average sort of
scholar, but my particular passions - painting and music - marked me as being
"different" from my school mates. I was not inadequate in athletics,
but I chose to specialise in gymnastics, which I could work at alone, by myself,
in my own time. I had an intense hatred of the compulsory military training which
we were subjected to once a week. In my "passive resistance"
to the pressures to conform that I sensed around me, I started to develop little
excentricities. I would suddenly say things that had no connection to what was
being discussed. I would impose a code of silence on myself for a day or two at
a time. I don't believe I was ever victimised - on the contrary I achieved a certain
notoriety that was in fact a little reassuring for my self-image as an individualist.
I was given the nick-name "spaz", short for spastic. As the school years
progressed I had greater freedom to develop my excentricities. I became a night
owl. I loved to practice the organ at all hours, alone in the chapel with its
enveloping darkness, or to paint at night in the art room, or even, as a house
prefect, to sit in my study, through to the early hours mesmerised by the glowing
coil of a heater, my mind in a stupor. I didn't understand what I was doing or
why. With no access (probably fortunately) to alcohol or drugs I think I was trying,
through sleep deprivation, to achieve a state of altered consciousness, a world
of unfettered imagination. (I remember reading years later about an ancient Chinese
artist who, having completed a large landscape painting, put down his brush and
disappeared into his creation.) My cultivated excentricities were perhaps partly
a result of my romantic notion of what it is to be an artist. But I think I was
also driven by a genuine need to escape convention. I wrote a poem about it that
was published in the school journal. No great literary masterpiece, but I find
it an illuminating window back onto my adolescent self. The
Madman (1962) O, what fools are these to have their form of logic
Dictated to them by their predecessors! Consider me, a rational being
living in my self-created heaven while these animals subsist forever smothered
by conformity. Why do these idiots prattle "facts"? Can
man ever prove a truth, disprove a dream? Why then, in this damned world
of lunatics am I, sane, condemned, because I choose to live as my divine
perception rules, because I choose to live? Who would stand to
prove me wrong? Civilisation, its culture and its ethics have grown from
seed, with crooked, twisted branches, palsied roots and poisoned berries
- Your life is illusionary, Your knowledge fallacious, Your world
a misconception. My world is a truth, I live by my beliefs, Besides
- Who would stand to proof me wrong? This idea that the creative
act took one beyond the irrational, beyond the known, the familiar, into a fantastic,
sometimes dangerous territory, is something that has reappeared in several of
my works over the years. The electronic piece Kryptophones
(1973) was inspired by listening to a shortwave radio on a beach in Greece. Suddenly
music and voices from all of Europe, Africa, the Middle East flooded in, the air
was filled with a whirlwind of sound. I realised with a shock that I these sounds
were around me constantly, but that, without the aid of a radio receiver, I could
not hear them. But what if I could? Is this not so different from a schizophrenic
condition, being able to hear voices that no-one else can hear? How could one
communicate one's experience? One would be considered mentally ill, surely. And
yet history is full of visionaries who heard secret voices - Joan of Arc, Jesus....
What is the difference between a prophet, a shaman, a fool, a madman?
Another project related to this idea is Poppea,
a work as yet unfinished. It is a "deconstruction" of Monteverdi's L'Incoronzione
de Poppea, where the original score is fragmented and overlaid with a derived
music which exists near the extremes of the frequency range - very high and very
low - a "meta-music" behind the formalised music of the Monteverdi original,
the real passions behind the expressed passions, the atavistic subconscious hidden
beneath "civilised" consciousness. Perhaps these ideas are
also present in Runes, a mixed media work
which I developed in two versions, an audio-visual with slides and tape (1984),
and a sound-image installation (1985). The images were of graffiti, photographed
in various toilets throughout Wellington, and included rather graphic sexist and
racist comments and imagery. In its new context the material became confrontational
- scribblings made in secret but intended to be read by an "anonymous other",
inarticulate messages and codes reflecting deep anxieties, intimate longings,
fears, hatreds, often expressed with almost painful crudity, now exposed to a
collective public gaze. What might have been considered offensive disfigurement
of a public facility was transformed into a testament to social maladjustment
and personal anguish. Now the sub-text of a lot of what I have talked
about up to this point is, patently, that obsession of adolescence, S-E-X. Its
what makes the world go round, it's what keeps us going. It is also the source
of a lot of the confusion we have about ourselves; it's something we often find
very difficult to talk about truthfully. I like to try to shock my first year
composition students by telling them that I believe that sex and creativity are
inextricably linked, that sex is the source of generative, creative energy. (Of
course any mother knows that this is a truth, but men often forget it.) As a schoolboy
I had an insight when I found that when I was painting and things were going well,
I often became sexually aroused. As a university student, in my quest
for "the meaning of life" I attended some meetings of the so-called
"School of Philosophy", which propagated the teachings of the Russian
philosopher/mystics Gurdjieff and Ouspensky. In my disillusionment with institutionalised
Christianity was impressed by the expounding of "a perennial philosophy"
which referred to a remarkably wide canon of human religious and mystical writing.
I was told that if I wanted to find a higher truth, to see myself objectively,
I had to learn non-attachment, the art of observing myself. But then, who is the
"I" and who is "myself"? Perplexing questions......
By this time, I had come to believe that the need to create is generated by neurosis,
in plain speech, by unhappiness, discontent, frustration. If I proceeded along
this path to self-enlightenment I could see that I might loose the urge to create.
That was not for me, I decided. I preferred to stay wallowing in the mire, wrestling
in my state of imperfect self-knowledge, alternately indulging and trying to tame
my ego. This is what living was all about! But what about music? Could
I be a composer? Was I simply in love with the romantic idea of being a composer?
Why was I so fascinated by this when there were so few role models, when composition
wasn't even a subject one could study at university. After all, I also had a talent
for painting and one went to art school to learn how to do it properly. Painting
I found easy, while my efforts at composing were painfully slow and difficult.
And yet these were some of the reasons it attracted me - there were so few composers,
it was such a complex and exacting art. Music, as sound, was so mysterious, ephemeral,
intangible, its power to move so undefinable. I saw music as a wonderfully manipulative
art, a kind of sexual substitute, seduction at a remove. I remember years ago
hearing readings from Nijinsky's diary - his sense of utter fulfilment while performing,
when he became the object of desire and adoration of an audience of thousands.
Better than sex. And then I think of the poetry of Michelangelo and the insight
it gives us into the mind of this melancholy man, who, by all accounts, was not
physically attractive, but who was obsessed by male physical beauty, a beauty
be was unable to possess, but which he had the power to recreate. Thank god for
neuroses! Love Sonnets of Michelangelo
(1982) Call me a masochist if you like, but I also chose music because
it is such hard work. It is a discipline. The perplexing barrier between musical
idea and musical expression which notation presents is a source of both fascination
and frustration. The creation of, say, five minutes of orchestral music may require
a month's work. But I am convinced of an essential fact of life - the more labour
invested, the greater the reward. One hears it in the early electronic works of
a Stockhausen or a Berio. These pieces still have currency today, they still impress
us. The limitations of the technology of the day meant that literally hundreds
of hours were spent in cutting up pieces of magnetic tape to create an effect
which today, with the use of computers, could be achieved in a matter of minutes.
But somehow the labour and commitment invested in the creation of those works
gives them a kind of innate integrity, which many more recent pieces simply do
not seem to have. And so composition, for me, is also a kind of mental,
one might say, spiritual discipline. It is hard work. One of the most memorable
moments in my travelling was to confront the temple complex at Ellora, Maharashtra,
in India, and to register how these extraordinary buildings were created. Huge
rock faces have been excavated to leave monumental structures which appear to
have been constructed from the ground up. But it is not what has been placed there,
it is what has been removed, which in terms of cubic material is much greater
than what remains. It is "architecture in negative". As if the builders
deliberately chose to make the task twice as difficult as it needed to be. The
Caves of Ellora for piano and brass ensemble (1979) was my response to
this experience. We might be tempted to think of the arts as detached
from everyday life. The artist, it has been suggested, "transcends"
his/her immediate circumstances. Certainly politics would seem to have little
to do with the arts. Or does it? Can an artist in contemporary society detach
him/herself from the socio-political implications of his/her actions? I've always
remembered the deliberately provocative statement of Hans Eisler, one of the composers
who collaborated with Brecht - "Composers, irrespective of the purpose for
which they believe they are producing music, must become aware of the social function
for which their music is being used. If they free themselves of all the prejudices
they will discover that regardless of their intentions, their music plays a great
part in what only can be described as trade in narcotics." I've
long been an admirer of the American composer/pianist Frederic Rzewski. While
his music is not necessarily always to my taste, I'm struck by the fact that almost
all his compositions are in some way a critical comment on contemporary social
issues. This is a man with a conscience, who uses his art to take a stand on such
issues as social injustice, political exploitation, racial prejudice. I had the
pleasure of meeting Frederic at the end of last year and hope that he might visit
NZ some time in 2000; I feel that we composers are all too often unaware of composing
being a political act, whether we like it or not. I was struck some years ago
when I met a Swedish composer who confidently declared himself "very left
wing", and fundamentally opposed to his government. I asked him how he lived
as a composer, and he said, "Oh, I have a government stipend". He didn't
regard himself compromised by this.....! My own "social awakening"
came with my sojourn in Java, 1976-77. In observing the many traditional functions
of music in that culture, the way that music could reflect society on many levels,
and provide a very real sense of social cohesion, I began to see my position as
a composer within my own society as rather meaningless, self-obsessed, elitist,
impotent, irrevelant, devoid of real meaning. I meet and recorded street
musicians who used music as a way of dignifying their need to beg for money. Many
of them had natural musical talent far stronger than my own. Even for those with
meagre musical talents, the circumstances of their performances often enhanced
their music. I remember once recording a street musician in a cheap hotel in a
small city in East Java. The boy played a tambourine as he sang. He was from the
neighbouring island of Madura. His voice had a penetrating nasal quality, a sound
that to Western ears would not be considered inherently "expressive".
But as we sat together with few of the hotel workers, listening, suddenly one
woman ran from the room. When I questioned her later she said that because she
understood the language, she was moved to tears by the song in which the singer
had created himself in which he told about the hardships of his life. She'd had
left the room for fear of embarrassing herself. I realised it was an
act of fate that had allowed me to indulge my musical passions; that I had been
born in New Zealand, that I had had access to a good education, etc, that I was
born white-skinned, and by Indonesian standards, wealthy. I began to sense the
burden of privilege, and to question the values which I had been brought up with,
and whether I could continue with my view of musical composition as a meaningful
and productive activity. Suddenly I felt my music needed to relate to the immediate
circumstances around me. Recordings I made in Indonesia in 1977 became material
for a whole series of electroacoustic pieces I worked on in subsequent years,
compositions through which I wanted to acknowledge the music, musicians and culture
which I had felt so privileged to have come in contact with. Among the pieces
was Fanfares (1981), using the sounds of street hawkers selling toys and sweets
to children, and Jangkrik Genggong (1981),
a mélange of six different versions of the same cheery song as interpreted
by street musicians and an amateur village gamelan. Another work, Arum
Manis (1991), used the recording of an Indonesian, fiddle-playing seller
of candy-floss mixed with the live performance of a string quartet. I was thrilled
when this work was premiered by the Kronos Quartet at the Lincoln Centre. Here
was a world famous ensemble playing what was in effect the "supporting role"
to an anonymous Indonesian artisan, since the tape part was deliberately presented
as foreground, and all the musical material was derived from the playing of the
humble street hawker. What about composition as overt protest, à
la Frederic Rzewski. That is not really my style, though on at least one occasion
I have taken what might be considered a provocative stance. In 1985 I was commissioned
by the NZSO to compose a work to celebrate the 25th anniversary of television
in New Zealand. Besides the concert work I also made a television programme for
broadcast, using news clips. The work was Little
Elegies, which, of course, hardly sounds celebratory! At the time I was
shocked and greatly moved by the film about the Cambodian conflict, "The
Killing Fields". (I also read the book though of course the film made a stronger
impact). I asked myself what was the unique contribution that television had made
to our culture. And the answer of course was the news, events worldwide, brought
to us in our living rooms within hours, neatly packaged and presented as entertainment
in the 6pm news slot. Human suffering, sufficiently sanitised so as not to put
us off our food. Little Elegies was my
response to the "gift" of television - these elegies could only be "little"
because nothing I could say would suffice to match the parade of human suffering
that we glimpse daily on our televisions. The response to my piece was muted,
but I still thought it was more important to "say something truthful",
rather than present my sponsors with a mere occasional piece. Again in
1995 I wrote a piano piece, Sarajevo, in response to a film, this time Kusturica's
"Underground", a sardonic view of the Bosnian war, tracing its roots
back to the Second World War. The ironies were brutal, as the victims of yesterday
become the villains of today. My piece is not a protest. It is more a fatalistic
acceptance of the corruptibility of human nature, and the unending cycle of human
violence into which we seem to have trapped ourselves. And so to religion,
although, in fact, politics and religion are sometimes difficult to extricate
one from the other. While I was at University in Auckland I spent two years singing
in Peter Godfrey's Cathedral choir - a marvellous musical education I will never
regret - and another two years as a church organist and choirmaster. The tiresome
cycle of Sunday sermons cured me forever of institutionalised religion. I couldn't
bare the cosy, sanctimonious self-righteous of it all. I had the idea of mounting
a kind of "guerrilla Mass", where the real, primitive symbolism of the
text could be laid bare for all to see - a lamb slaughtered on the cathedral floor,
during the Agnus Dei for instance. But, over the years, I have continued to set
religious texts, and wonder if this could be read as hypocrisy on my part. Marvel
not Joseph (1976), was one such work. It combines two mediaeval carols, one expressing
Mary's devotional submissiveness, the other Joseph's bewilderment and suspicion
concerning his fiancé's pregnancy. I thought the mediaeval poet had a point
of view that was totally human, and a wonderful antidote to the improbable concept
of a virgin birth. Likewise my offering for a St Cecelia Day concert in 1993,
Wedding Song for Saint Cecelia. We all
know that Cecilia is the patron Saint of music, but evidently this is a relatively
modern assignation. She is known as a Roman martyr who refused sex with her husband
on her wedding night. What a dreadful Miss Goody-good! And so I thought she should
be "rehabilitated" as someone worthy of being the patron saint of music,
that most sensuous of arts, and I found her a delicious, erotic text from the
Songs of Solomon in which she could praise the beauty and desirability of her
lover's body. But aside from religion there are other spiritual aspects
of music which we can consider, music, let us say, as a mystical experience. Last
year I made the acquaintance of a remarkable Argentinian composer Alejandro Iglessias-
Rossi, for whom composing is a sacred act. At first I mistook his religiosity
as the heavy hand of Catholicism, but I soon discovered that his belief was much
larger than this. He viewed the activity of composing as demanding the commitment,
the devotion, the sense of responsibility to the art equal to that required of
a priest. A subsuming of the self in something larger; in music, perhaps, a striving
towards a state of Dyonesian ecstasy where the self ceases to exist. The composer
as priest, or perhaps, better, shaman. While I don't believe my own composition
has ever attained this state, I have heard it in other performances. The folksinger
Ji Zhengju, who performed in my opera Alley,
sang with his whole body, his voice taken to the limits of what his slender frame
could project. And I often hear this striving towards something beyond the self
in the ecstatic vocal styles of the Middle East - Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan.
I have witnessed the hypnotic power of music. On one occasion I was recording
a trance dance in a small village in Sumatra. The music was somewhat repetitive
to my ears - I was more fascinated by the spectacle where the entranced dancers
perform superhuman feats. But a man, sick in bed at some distance from the performance
area heard the music and became entranced. His family panicked and ran in search
of a dukun (a traditional doctor or soothsayer) to restore him to a normal state,
since his heath was so fragile. And this from just the sound of the music.
I witnessed another type of trance performance at the 1981 South Pacific
Arts Festival in Port Moresby - the Baining Fire Dance, in which near-naked participants
wearing gigantic masks danced frenetically in complex rhythms through fire. The
music possessed the dancers, and enabled them to execute extraordinary feats of
endurance and physical co-ordination, oblivious to pain, such that a fully-conscious
man would have been unable to do. In Java one hears music at all times
of the night: a puppet performance broadcast to the whole neighbourhood throughout
the night - the music and story penetrates into the dreams of the whole community,
uniting them in a mythical world where the cosmic forces struggle towards a resolution.
Or the 4.20am call to prayer from half a dozen mosques within earshot, blending
into a strange, serendipitous polyphony - I remember this particular sound, heard
for the first time, as I lay at the edge of consciousness, still drugged by sleep,
as seeming like the music of paradise, a music of beauty such that I could never
find in ordinary existence. This, then, concludes this my random collection
of thoughts about the sex, politics and religion of music. Thank you for listening. Afterword
to Jack Body's 'Sex, Politics, Religion - And Music' by Robert Hoskins Jack
Body, composer, ethnomusicologist, teacher, music publisher, record producer,
and photographer, born in Te Aroha and educated both here and Europe, is presently
an associate professor at Victoria University. His extensive range of compositions
includes solo, chamber and orchestral music, music for dance, theatre and film,
and electroacoustic music. Jack Body became fascinated with Asian music after
an overland journey in 1971 and his subsequent absorption of musical styles outside
the Western classical tradition has given him the reputation of a composer who
has greatly extended the resources of New Zealand music. Body is a composer
of graphic richness and of extreme subtlety and sophistication. Suara:
Environmental Music from Java (1978-90/1993), a tape-cycle, Sarajevo
(1995) for piano, and Melodies for Orchestra
(1983), for example, display technical complexities which establish him as one
of our major contemporary artists. He is also noted for the unprecedented vividness
with which, in such works as Love Sonnets of Michelangelo
(1982), Pulse (1995), and Poems
of Solitary Delights (1985), he expresses a sensuously apprehended world.
In Turtle Time (1968), a threshold piece
about death, the journey out of mortality into ghosthood is presently to be made:
the mixture of salutation and farewell sounded in the manipulation of clock-like
chimes and a somnambulant drift is the perfect equivalent for the balance between
natural grief and the recognition of necessity which pervades Russell Haley's
text. In Carol to Saint Stephen (1975),
based on the medieval carol "Eya, Martyr Stephane", the reflexiveness
of the form is the right correlative for the reflexiveness of the feeling. As
the music proceeds, exhortation becomes self-lamentation; the angelic register
of the dying martyr's blessing on those who stone him, collapses the distance
between man's recognition of his own negative potential and a flash of beatitude
which comes with the awareness of life in death and death in life. Jack
Body's music never loses touch with the suffered world and it is the undermusic
of just such knowledge that makes works like Little
Elegies (1985) for orchestra - most known in form that underlays a visual
track of news footage depicting atrocities and other "inhumanities"
- the common, unrarified expression of a disappointment that is beyond self-pity.
The state of things at the end of the opera Alley
(1997), finds Rewi Alley an old man making no secret of the prejudice and contrariness
at the centre of his nature, nor shirking the bleakness of that last place in
himself. Even so, consolation can be found in the sensation of spirit not so much
projected onward as brimming over and above the body. Not all giant trees
are broken by the storm Not all seeds find no soil to strike root Not
all true feelings Vanish in the desert of man's heart Not all dreams allow
their wings to be clipped No, not everything ends as you foretold. Body's
hybridised musical discourse, melding East and West, serves a purpose whereby
each voice can unmask the other. A field recording of rice pounding music ("Kotekan"/Suara)
can inform our hearing of, say the first of the Five
Melodies (1982) for piano, and the penultimate movement of the cyclic Suara
- an old man playing a bamboo jew's harp with choking oversounds ("Music
Mulut" (1990)/Suara) - not only underscores the figure of age but prefigures
the epilogue, a field recording of pigeons with whistles tied to their tails,
winging home at sunset ("Sawangan"/Suara) - a sound which takes in and
gives back the signals of a universal solitude. Robert Hoskins,
editor, Massey University Composer Address series
back
to Publications
|