Just sit and watch the visual music.
The author of On an Overgrown Path has been discussing the current head-scratching on ways to attract a new younger public to classical music. One tried and tested Zen option is quite simple. Invite them to just sit and listen. I would re-phrase that. By means of a video-clip, invite them to sit, listen and watch the visual music. I'll come back to this later. Just looking at the perspective, calm water and colour of Bob's header image makes you want to sit and experience this stillness, even without any music. After only five seconds you'll feel better. Try it here.
A few words on live kinetic painting with Pierre-Laurent Aimard at the Yellow Lounge.
From Sofia
Gubaidulina’s Garden of Joys and Sorrows.
Image the musicians sitting in the green centre.
Audiences (young and old) tell me that my live kinetic
painting to music transports them into another world. Because my visuals are conceived with the score and follow it closely, they feel that they can see
the music. I'm offering them an added insight, in addition to the aural perception. The kinetic painting is abstract enough to allow the
imagination to roam and there's something about the flow of the water-colours with the music that draws you in and provokes a visceral reaction. You feel it in your guts. They
come away enlightened, back from that other world where they find inner peace,
recharged with dopamine from a Gesamtkunst
experience. With these audio-visual performances,
sitting or standing still for a long time is not a problem. Does this sound like PR blurb? Well, ask any of
them. Here’s one comment:
"I was aware of the quiet concentration of the other spectators. Very quiet, but in a natural way, not an imposed silenced. The colours, the rhythm, the world and atmosphere that you conjured up were so powerfully absorbing, that I found myself drawn into a timeless state. Time and space ceased to exist - just colour, shapes, movement and music as one whole. As I watched, I found myself becoming part of what I was watching - perhaps it sounds silly, but I felt part of a greater Oneness."
Takemitsu’s
Black Rain, performed in Korea with
the Sejong string ensemble in 2007 on August 6th, the anniversary of the atomic
bomb on Hiroshima. Imagine the “shock waves” of
paint, slowly spreading outwards over the desolation of the city. The red
Japanese flag turns white in an awful
silence.
This synergy of painting and music may help us to fulfill a basic need: to slow....down and cherish the moment. Try watching the video below, full
screen. This music may not be to your taste and it may be a challenge to sit still for eight minutes, but let's just run this test. Focus on the
screen. Turn the sound up (the first two minutes are barely audible). In this case there's no real painting, simply organized flow. This is about as slow as you can make it. If your coffee gets cold, I've made my point! (Go to YouTube for other, more dynamic examples).
Meditation on the beginning of Górecki's Symphony no.3 (Sorrowful Songs). A lament on the tragedy of a mother's loss of her child and of a child separated from her mother in a Gestapo prison cell.
London Sinfonietta. Conductor David Zinman.
How come nobody ever comments on your posts, Norman? There is always so much food for thought and discussion and your work is so intensely absorbing I would have expected dozens if not scores of comments each time. I'm very happy to know that you find the time to continue writing this blog. Thank you! Catherine
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