What motivates you to write music?
In The Idiot Brain by Dean
Burnett motivation is divided into two categories, external (extrinsic) and
internal (intrinsic). Many composers will be aware of problems arising from extrinsic
difficulties as the main external motivator is receiving payment for your product.
Some of the problems arising may include
Not having sympathy with
the project or task set.
Having to spend time
developing new skills to achieve the task, hence additional effort required.
Mismatch of personalities
involved in the project, lack of appreciation, unwarranted interference, and
inappropriate criticism.
Meeting deadlines.
Many of these problems involve
the musician in degrees of compromise, and for some the problems are part of
the enjoyment as the clash of personalities satisfies the flight or fight
element which Dean Burnett makes great play of in his book.
Intrinsic motivation may arise
from apparently more noble desires, a love of philosophy or humanity expressed
through music. What are the ingredients for intrinsic motivation? Burnett
offers three controlling factors. The
first is autonomy, the control of circumstances around the creative process, the
second, competency, which in the case of music can fluctuate depending matters
such as style or harmonic language, and finally relatedness, relating to our
sense of recognition and identity. The image of the composer in isolation
having Titanic struggles to produce a score which reaches out to the world is
common enough in the public mind and incorporates the controlling factors in a
neat package.
In all art forms there are
many people with considerable competence who shun the main extrinsic motivation,
they are amateurs, a word which carries more negative than positive
associations. These are the terms
offered by the Word Thesaurus:
Unprofessional, sloppy,
slapdash, substandard, incompetent, inexpert, shoddy, slipshod, clumsy, crude
and inept.
The most positive term is
recreational. In case you feel insulted by this description the matter can be
balanced by Chambers Dictionary of Etymology which states
Amateur n. 1784, lover of (some activity or
thing), borrowed from French or Old French amateur,
learned borrowing from Latin amatorem
(nominative amator) lover, from amare to love, of uncertain origin.
In terms of the self there
is justification for intrinsic work with art, and this is true from an early
age. When we experience positive outcomes from our creative endeavours without
external pressures to deliver the product we attribute greater value to the
outcome. This is in part a response to the sensation of being in control.
On a personal level there
is a great deal of enjoyment to be had in the interaction with a DAW or Digital
Audio Workstation, so much so that I can think of it as a motivator towards
musical fulfilment. It provides a number of musical sounds, synthetic, sampled,
recorded, it assists my play of the sounds in terms of rhythm and articulation
and may cope with problems that humans may carp at or find impossible. It isn’t critical of my choices. Unless I
extend the work done this way and bring it to the messy world of human
interaction it is in danger of being a very sterile environment no matter how
flattering to my ego.
Whether one is an
egotistical composer (Wagner-like) enjoying (apparently) full control over the
product or non-egotistical (Cage-like), there is a common anticipation of some
type of reward and that is primarily an appreciation or response from an
audience. Negative responses are nothing new to composers and often have long
term positive outcomes, Stravinsky’s Rite has to be the best modern example of
this. The audience may be large or small and the response may be immediate or
felt over a long period of time. This brings us to preservation or the
extension of ourselves through art and music. Death is inevitable and the fear
of it does wonders for stimulating the ego, so it is natural to find many witty
and moving quotations about art and death:
“The day will come
When my body no longer exists
But in the lines of this poem
I will never let you be alone
The day will come
When my voice is no longer heard
But within the words of this poem
I will continue to watch over you
The day will come
When my dreams are no longer known
But in the spaces found in the letters of this poem
I will never tire of looking for you”
When my body no longer exists
But in the lines of this poem
I will never let you be alone
The day will come
When my voice is no longer heard
But within the words of this poem
I will continue to watch over you
The day will come
When my dreams are no longer known
But in the spaces found in the letters of this poem
I will never tire of looking for you”
And
“I'm wishing he could see that music lives.
Forever. That it's stronger than death. Stronger than time. And that its
strength holds you together when nothing else can.”
Of course the way music is appreciated alters over
a period a time, values change not always for the better.
Let us come
back to the present and consider another motivating factor, completeness. It is
obviously related to the expectations of others (extrinsic considerations),
unfinished operas are not altogether popular despite modern day use of open
ended storylines. However it is the temporary
open-ended nature of soap operas that make them work well, our desire for
completion drives us to the hope of fulfilment. The road to completion for the intrinsic
minded composer is full of potholes, the form needs adjustment, there is too
much / too little repetition, the melody has a weakness, the rhythm is too
relaxed and so on. There are times when the audience responds to the challenge
presented by the composer’s intentions, Sibelius 5 comes to mind, it is as if
we are invited to hear and share the anxieties of the music as it is being
formed, and finally hammered into shape.
For many composers completion is involved with
audience response, even on the level of submitting a piece to a virtual
audience on a site like Contemporary Music on G+. There is a level of concern
for many as they post and ask for a response, negative responses may shape the
way a composer develops his music, and no responses at all may be actually
painful. That is an issue we remain constantly aware of on this blogsite, and we
work at making our bias towards being supportive in our criticism.
Postscript:
Nurtan sent me an e-mail commenting on the post this morning (10.04.2016). With his permission I add it to the blog:
Postscript:
Nurtan sent me an e-mail commenting on the post this morning (10.04.2016). With his permission I add it to the blog:
Yesterday I started to think about the motivation blog, why one
would compose music or paint a painting or cook gourmet meal? Why create
something, good or bad. Is it the essence of the aesthetic karma of being
human?
Is there a need for creation even if you only
have rudimentary skills? Is the drive to composer or
share universal? Some small voice in our minds says to us that
this might be our footprint on earth and it is permanent.
Yet we know that has an unlikely permanence, I thought of my
grandfather’s lost poetry. He meticulously copied his memoires and poetry to10
volumes of notebooks which were lost sometime during the twenty-five years
after his death. He could have had published most or a least some of the poems.
But he did not – he found the satisfaction in writing.
In 2012 I saw a wonderful production of King Lear at the Royal
Shakespearean theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon. Almost immediately I started a
tone poem/Symphony based on that experience. The completed first draft is still
in a drawer waiting to be edited. The completion of the first draft ( on and
off took about two years) was the work or the desire or the drive to accomplish
the task. Nobody is going to even consider playing a 50 minute piece by an
unknown composer. In that sense it is complete. I thought for some
time about why people would compose on a voluntary basis. This could
be as an amateur or professional (since only a rare composer can make a
decent living solely by his/her trade without supplemental income). It became
apparent to me that there is something very human, something very special in
some people who successfully or unsuccessfully engage in what we call an
artistic endeavour or trade or a skilled hobby/profession. I tried to find
reasons why people might do this or choose not to do it – that was to no avail.
This morning I decided that I can only answer that question for myself and that
may not be easy or even be possible to generalise.
If I don't do something related to music each and every day I
consider the day lost. That is a feeling one can afford only when one is young
and healthy, in those years the time passes slowly and one's life is endless.
Therefore, if your head is full of sounds, if you are skilled enough to produce
a passable piece of music and if you know that the satisfaction of hearing your
creation is an indescribably wonderful feeling; for that best or worst reason,
you sit down and write music. After the fact, if someone else plays or likes
your creation, or if you get paid expressing your feelings through your music
or if you become a famous composer, it is well and good. They are icing on the
cake. I write music because if I don't I
will wither away and turn to dust. But, I don't think that the satisfaction it
produces is any different than making music through playing an instrument or
producing a painting or growing tomatoes in your garden or knitting a pair of
socks or reading a good book. Now I wonder how common is this feeling…
Very good!
ReplyDelete"Verrà il giorno
Quando il mio corpo non esisterà più
Ma nei versi di questa poesia
Io non ti permetterò di essere solo
Verrà il giorno
Quando la mia voce non sarà più sentita
Ma all'interno delle parole di questa poesia
Io continuerò a vegliare su di te
Verrà il giorno
Quando i miei sogni non saranno più noti
Ma negli spazi trovati tra le lettere di questa poesia
Non mi stancherò mai di cercare per te"
Sapardi Djoko Damono
ReplyDeleteVita brevis, ars longa, occasio praeceps, experientia incerta, iudicium difficile.
Life is short, and art long, opportunity fleeting, experience fallible, judgement difficult.
Does language inform our instinct or is it the other way around?