Just this past Sunday, I played in
a strings ensemble concert. We’re a mixed group; some of us are professionals
while some are not. But the magic that all of us created there—for just the
space of an hour—was indescribable. We really cast a spell there.
And this magic didn’t just happen.
We practiced our music until it became magic. We worked it until it became
perfect so that we could create something sublime.
But recordings can be played over
and over again at the push of a button. Recordings are certainly very
convenient and wonderful, and without them we would never be able to listen to
old recitals or violin concertos or any other music that we would otherwise be
unable to experience.
The things that I am going to say
are really just my own thoughts. I am not saying that recordings are bad, but I
think that live performances are preferable to recordings. When you go to a
concert, you not only get to hear the music as it’s being produced, you see the
musicians as they are playing, and form a sort of connection to them. If you
are a musician, you are producing the music yourself, which is an even more
wonderful thing.
On the other hand, recordings are
static. The process has already taken place, and the music is now packaged
frozen, just waiting to be microwaved. While this is very convenient, it’s
certainly not as good as having it fresh from the garden.
I have another objection to
recordings. They can be an occasion for musicians with little or no playing
talent to impress the world, and I’m sure they have. All that anyone has to do
to make a spotless recording is to put lots of little bits of music together
with the aid of a computer—plus the necessary equipment. (A few people don’t
even try to sing anymore. All they have to do is talk into a computer and bend
their voice pitch to particular frequencies.) Still, a great many recordings
are produced by very talented musicians, and my objection is only that they can be done by people with little or no
musical talent; I’m sure they have been. (If I'm wrong about anything in this paragraph, please correct me.)
This entire article is just an
attempt to voice my somewhat embryonic thoughts on this subject (thoughts that might not all be right). I must admit
that I don’t know much about the ways that live music can be better than
recorded music. I also admit that I listen to a great quantity of recorded
music all the time; I love it. In fact, I listen to more recordings than live
music. Either one is good in its own way, but perhaps our culture makes music too easy, like frozen food.
If you have thoughts on this,
please tell me. This is going to be a very interesting topic for discussion.
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