Magic has been drained out of history by the historians.
Gordon White
There
has been a fundamental omission in the telling of the past, not just our past
history but also in the way that we understand music, and that is the role of
magic. It is difficult for us to reconnect with the fundamental belief in magic
that our predecessors had, it was infused in everything that they did , and by
extension music and art was a magical connection with the other world.
Without
reinserting that fundamental belief in magic and the supernatural back into
history, it is impossible to fully understand why or how people thought. We
also have to respect those people and not just remove ourselves from this
colonial Western modern thinking and all its pomposity that we have the
answers, because we obviously do not1 So, with a little bit of humility we can
see that our ancestors’ belief and the use of magical ritual and spiritual
practices, gave rise to incredible innovations in art and technology. For us
our focus is what this type of thinking did regarding music.
Music
and art were used to invoke and evoke states of consciousness and they knew
that. Their definitions of how these things happened would be different from
ours, as we will explain them using psychological terminology. But anybody who
is a student of Carl Jung will understand that psychology is really only a
cipher for magical thinking. As evidenced by the Red Book.
I
would say that today music is disconnected from this otherness, it has little
or no inner energy, this is why root styles of music frequently come back into
the popular music arena and re-energise music. This can be disguised as rock
and roll, punk or grunge and there is something innately visceral and
otherworldly about those sorts of animals.
One
thing that could be said about modern pop music is there is nothing really
magical about it. It is so computerised and quantised that any essence of energy
has been removed and replaced by something sterile. However, if the computer
becomes the servant and not the master the essence of the DJ producer can be
bound into the songs, dance is a good example of this. I think the deciding
point here is, were any risks taken? Producing a song by a Rihanna or a Katy
Perry maybe more a case of not getting it wrong than getting it right, because
of the big budgets involved.
We
find it very difficult to be able to think in a mediaeval style, because we
have been told that many of the things they believed are rubbish, but obviously
they did not think that. If however you ask yourself the question ‘why
ritualistic behaviour and magic systems seem to have been unchanged over a
period of 2000 years, why keep doing something that does not work? The logical
answer to that is, it did. But it is only us that have rid ourselves of the
magical tools from the toolbox.
I am
suggesting that by looking back at styles that may influence us musically and
getting to the root of what it is that drives it, we can reconnect with what
the music is all about and derive something from it for ourselves; if only to
reanimate the music that we play.
You do
not have to believe in magic and the supernatural; only suspend your disbelief
to unlock the unconscious. I would suggest listening to musical styles such as
Blues or Flamenco , or the English folk music tradition and see what sort of
weirdness you can find in there; Mojo’s, Dances of the spider, impossible tasks
asked of ex-lovers etc. Pull on that thread a little and see where it takes
you.
Then
maybe off to the crossroads to talk to Old Nick
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