And now for something a bit different. I’m promoting shaun’s personal memoir/essay regarding the influence of music on his life. What shapes our individual lives is political, as well. And besides I just I just like it. Steven D.
Neither of my parents were particularly musical, although my father had a lovely singing voice and was a great whistler. My mother not so much. I vaguely recall big band music played on a staticy, low-fi AM radio when I was really little, but it wasn’t until we got an FM — a hulking Philco in a Bakelite case — that I became aware of the ability of music to transport me, especially vocalist Ella Fitzgerald, whom my father would sometimes accompany in his post-cocktail hour beatitude when she sang Cole Porter’s “Every Time We Say Goodbye” or “You Is My Woman Now” from Porgy and Bess.
Many years on, I look back on a life in which music has been a nearly constant companion, and when that life was especially dark, often my only companion. But until fairly recently, as relatively well read as I am on music, musicians and even a little music theory, I never considered my own role — the role of listener.
Why does music feel so good to me? Why do I feel so much?
Why can I listen to Glenn Gould’s recording of Bach’s “Goldberg Variations” yet again and hear even more distinctly not just the notes but the spaces between the notes in this astonishing series of classical piano riffs?
Why can I listen to the Allman Brothers segue from “Whipping Post” into the opening cords of “Mountain Jam” on their classic 1971 Fillmore East concert recording yet again, know what’s coming, and the hair on my neck still stands up?
Why can I listen to Joni Mitchell singing her anthem “Amelia” yet again and see with even more clarity “six jet planes leaving six white vapor trails across the bleak terrain . . . the hexagram of the heavens, it was the strings of my guitar”?
Why can I listen to Charlie Parker honking his way through “Body and Soul” yet again and still hear something I missed before? And understand why Bird’s is not just another rendition of a lovely jazz standard, but the very essence of bebop?
It was time to figure out why.
YOUR DOPAMINE IS SHOWING
The fundamentals of that why are fairly well understood. Listening to emotive music causes the brain to release dopamine, a feel-good chemical involved in addiction (ohmygawd!), which puts music right up there with sex, drugs, gambling and good food. This, neuroscientists explain in belaboring the obvious, is why music has been such a huge part of human history.
“You’re following these tunes and anticipating what’s going to come next and whether it’s going to confirm or surprise you, and all of these little cognitive nuances are what’s giving you this amazing pleasure,” explains Valorie Salimpoor, a neuroscientist at McGill University in Montreal. “The reinforcement or reward happens almost entirely because of dopamine.”
Salimpoor and her colleagues have linked music-induced pleasure with a surge in intense emotional arousal, including changes in heart rate, pulse and breathing rate. Along with these physical changes, she says people often report feelings of shivers or chills, a not uncommon experience for myself, someone who can become gelid upon hearing accordion or jazz violin, as well as roots reggae, because of the minor chords and swinging backbeat that suffuse that genre.
(A disclaimer: While I can get all gooey over accordion, about a half an hour of polka music a year is plenty for me, while I can never get enough jazz violin, whether it is Joe Venuti or Jean-Luc Ponty, or roots reggae, whether it is the inestimable Bob Marley and his Wailers or other roots trailblazers like U-Roy and King Tubby.)
Just anticipating those opening notes of “Mountain Jam” can get the old dopamine flowing.
MUSIC AND THE MOMENT
If you feel somewhat underwhelmed over the neuroscientific explanation for that why, join the club. Reading several books on listening and music in general didn’t do it either; most were so dense you could stand a tuning fork in them.
Then I stumbled on How Music Works by David Byrne. Yes, that David Byrne. The founding spirit of the new wave band Talking Heads, he of collaborations with Brian Eno and more recently with the singer St. Vincent, shovels aside the claptrap, writing:
“You can’t touch music — it exists only at the moment it is being apprehended — and yet it can profoundly alter how we view the world and our place in it. Music can get us through difficult patches in our lives by changing not only how we feel about ourselves, but also how we feel about everything outside ourselves. It’s powerful stuff.”
THE SNOB IS OUTTED
As noted, I had grown up listening to standards — that good old American Songbook — as sung by Ella and others, and as a youngster would lie in bed on too-hot-to-sleep summer nights singing or humming “Peg O My Heart,” “Shine On Harvest Moon,” and “Stardust” in particular. But as my musical tastes grew more sophisticated (or so I assumed in a decidedly snobbish way), I abandoned standards because they were old fashioned. Corny. Uncool.
Apparently like a goodly number of people, including Byrne, I was roped back in by Willie Nelson’s 1978 cover of “Stardust” and his album of standards by the same name. I had adored Nelson for years and once smoked a joint with him in Austin, but what (additionally) blew me away about his take on “Stardust” was truly understanding for the first time how a gifted artist can give a song their own unique interpretation. This, in turn, taught me a lesson: Great music, and in particular great music like Hoagy Carmichael’s “Stardust,” which has perhaps the sweetest melody ever written, becomes even greater in the hands of a master like Nelson.
(The same can be said of many other songs, including to name a very few, Suzanne Vega covering the Grateful Dead’s “China Doll,” Debbie Harry and Iggy Pop covering Cole Porter’s “Well Did You Evah,” and perhaps the greatest example to my ears, Jimi Hendrix covering Bob Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower.”)
While I restrained myself from calling out “Play Stardust! Play Stardust!” when I saw Nelson and his band open for the Grateful Dead a couple of times in subsequent years, I silently thanked him for outting me as a musical snob.
(Cont. below the fold)
MISSING THE BEAT
It was a lovely summer evening, stars flowed over our heads like a celestial river, and the sounds of Ahmad Jamal’s Blue Moon album wafted through the windows out onto the deck behind the mountain retreat. We had been joined by our friend Bud Nealy.
Most of us are lucky to be pretty good at one thing. Bud has been very good at three: As a photographer, a maker of knives and as jazz drummer who has played with some of the greats. “Who’s that?” he asked, his drummer’s radar locking onto the complex rhythms on Blue Moon, rhythms which were underscored by a drummer and two percussionists.
“Jamal’s so damned rhythmic, it’s how he see’s it,” Bud said, noting that like many great musicians, Jamal and his ensemble were playing with the beat. Which is to say before, after and pretty much everywhere except on the beat. Like the great band leaders, Jamal understood how to direct his ensemble, speeding it up or slowing it down. The result was that it really swung.
(Great singers do the same thing with the beat. Like Willie Nelson.)
Byrne cites an experiment performed by a neuroloscientist who also happens to be a musician. This guy had a classical pianist play a Chopin piece on a Diskclavier, a kind of electromechanical player piano. The piano “memorized” the keystrokes and could play them back. The scientist then dialed back the pianist’s expressiveness until every note exactly hit the beat.
“No surprise, this came across as drained of emotion, though it was technically more accurate,” Byrne writes. “Musicians sort of knew this already — that the emotional center is not the technical center, that funky grooves are not square . . . “
THANKS FOR THE MEMOREX
The advent of recorded sound and quantum leaps in sound technology since then have left the notion that music could only be appreciated in the moment in the scrap heap along with the typewriter and buggy whip. I also believe this technology has compelled musicians to play better, sometimes much better.
The Grateful Dead were unusual in permitting taping of their performances; in fact, an area in the audience near the soundboard would be roped off just for tapers with their sophisticated portable decks and shotgun mikes on booms, so there were people already listening to a replay of a concert in the parking lot after shows. Today hundreds of shows are available as MP3 downloads, among other formats, and there are commercially-released DVDs of pristine soundboard recordings.
Having a state-of-the-art recording of a given concert doesn’t cheapen the experience. If there is a drawback, it is that the audience, which was such an integral part of the Grateful Dead experience, is a distant whisper on a soundboard DVD, which is why I prefer a recording by one of those tapers out amongst the writhing, tie-dyed masses. This is because it is so atmospheric, although technically inferior and in places downright murky.
Meanwhile, the only thing I like about MP3s is the convenience of being able to download a song or an entire album.
I’m with Byrne when he writes: “[MP3s] may be the most convenient medium so far, but I can’t help thinking the psychoacoustic trickery used to develop them . . . is a continuation of this trend in which we are seduced by convenience. It’s music in pill form, it delivers vitamins, it does the job, but something is missing.”
HAPPY SAD
A while back, I put together a baker’s dozen list of my favorite musical compositions. I guess it was a slow day. I hadn’t looked at the list since I assembled it, but was not surprised that of the 13 compositions, only three were arguably “happy,” while the other 10 could be called either “sad” or “pensive.”
No surprise because sad songs make me happy.
Why? Because sad music has a counterintuitive appeal for listeners, according to researchers. It allows us to experience indirectly — I daresay to feel — the emotions expressed in the lyrics. Not surprisingly, to me anyway, the melodies are usually in a minor key. And while the sadness may not mirror the listener’s own experiences (although “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” is on my list and I did, in a sense, leave my heart there when I moved back East many years ago), it does trigger the release of that good-old dopamine.
IN A JAM
Let me wrap up my yammering by noting that if given a choice, I prefer an extended song over a short one. Take the blues classic “Who Do You Love?” I adore the original, Bo Diddley’s hoodoo-rich 2 minute-17 second 1957 single, but Quicksilver Messenger Service’s 25-minute extended jam on their 1969 Happy Trails album takes the cake.
Why? Because I prefer instrumental prowess over vocalizing, even as great as Bob Diddley’s lyrics.
Besides which, Quicksilver’s performance, which was recorded live, preserves the lyrics and rhythm, although the band stretches both, creating an interactive and deeply psychic motif around guitarist John Cipollina’s arpeggios.
It once frustrated me that groups like Steely Dan and The Band never jammed. (I got over it.) The closest The Band came was the coda on “It Makes No Difference” from The Last Waltz. Can you imagine what an extended version of that tearjerker would be like in the hands of these brilliant instrumentalists?
Cipollina, by the way, is one of those musicians whose style is so distinctive that you can ID him after only a note or two. Just like Charlie Parker.
Legendary jazz cornetist Bix Beiderbecke hated making records because he felt they were too limiting. “For a musician with a lot to say,” he liked to say, “it was like telling Dostoevsky to do the Brothers Karamazov as a short story.”
I am going out to a party, but as a performing musician, i have a lot to add to this.
And yes, just hearing the drums entering Mountain Jam -and knowing that it was preceded by 12 minutes of Elizabeth Reed and nearly a half-hour of Whipping Post- gets the dopamine flowing.
Listening to music is wonderful, especially when you get transcendental. But performing it? Holy shit. It’s the best. Just the best.
More later, most likely tomorrow.
Awesome diary, shaun.
Got me to remembering. Lying on the floor on a Sunday afternoon in the 1950s listening to the Red Label 45 recording of Ferde Grofe’s “Grand Canyon Suite”. Or my mom’s favorite, Wayne King’s (The Waltz King) cover of Irving Berlin’s “Blue Skies”. Or discovering that “Stranger in Paradise” was a sly quote from a movement in Alexander Borodin’s “Prince Igor”. Or hearing Ravel’s “Bolero” for the first time, which my dad dubbed “Hannibal Crossing the Alps”. Program music and movie music conditioned me at an early age to perceive music either visually or as the score behind a drama. The music from Richard Rodger’s score of “Victory at Sea” was the music of World War II as far as I knew.
I was in school bands. I can still remember the nights after high school football games with music sounding in my head as I tried to sleep. Practice so ingrained music into us that there are couple of significant half time performances that even over 50 years later I can almost physically and aurally get through.
Folk and protest music and thinking music turned me from standards, and the rich poetry of Simon and Garfunkel and Bob Dylan’s lyrics obscured the significant music behind it. And in 1968 rock finally started screaming in with Jimi Hendrix and Santana’s exquisite shimmering instrumental work. Allman’s slide guitar work, Marshall Tucker Band, and Black Oak Arkansas reconnected me with Southern music and open up country and Johnny Cash. The Doors fugue in Light My Fire is one that I eventually could hold the individual note progression and the flow in consciousness at the same time. Magical stuff.
Much more is flowing now. Thanks for opening up these memories and providing the context for contemplating what exactly it means to be a listener.
Lissen up, shaun.
I am sorry to be the bearer of bad tidings, but…David Byrne is part of the problem, not part of the solution. I recorded with him as a sideman long ago and far away and…pre-digital revolution (or at least during the transition period)…and he and his cohorts were full-on synth/overdub heads.
So what?
So this.
David Byrne complaining about the mechanization/digitalization of music is like Obama bemoaning the Bush II-era Iraq shit while simultaneously having accepted his role as part of the whole scam. There is only one way to make or hear real music. Live. Dassit. Everything else is pre-packaged food. Frozen or canned, it makes no difference. You think you’re getting some endorphins happening listening to recorded stuff? (And this is coming from someone who basically made his living recording music before he woke the fuck up.) You ain’t getting 10% of the real deal. And the people…like Byrne…who self-congratulatorily laud themselves as “pure musicians” while running the whole pop scam for all they’re worth? They’re full of shit.
Like I said…sorry to pop yer bubble.
You want the real real thing?
Y’gotta go out of your house and search for it.
I dunno where you live… probably somewhere in Delaware, looking at your user page…but it’s out there.
Everywhere.
Baltimore, DC, Philly, NYC.
Even Wilmington.
Hell…one of the greatest composer/arrangers of the wonderful Nuyorican Golden Age of the Mambo lives in Newark, DE. Do you know who it is? Betcha you don’t, because he no longer wants to be known.
Sick of the hustle.
Bet on it.
You want the real thing? You have to look for it.
Every time the music is packaged and then re-packaged it takes a step back from any possible version of real Endorphinville. After an artist or group surrenders enough times to the economic necessities imposed on them by the PermaGov’s corporate controllers, ain’t no endorphins left in their scene. Just hustle. (Precisely the PermaGov’s plan. Bet on that as well.)
Just sayin’…
Unless you are “waking up” at a rehearsal or gig being played by master musicioans, you’re not waking up at all. It’s just another stick-figuire cartoon of reality to which you think that you are listening. Like eating Rice Crispies for breakfast instead of freshly made brown rice.
Sorry, but there it is.
Deal wid it.
You be bettah off if you do.
But…if you don’t?
Well…what the hell.
At least you won’t be lonely.
David Byrne.
Burger King hype for the lefitness intellechuls.
Nice.
WTFU.
Later…
AG
Opposing opinions are always appreciated. Myself, being tone deaf and not a musician, I don’t know who is right, Arthur, you or Shaun, but thanks for adding your voice here.
That’s meant sincerely, and not as snark, just so you know.
Have a good day. Check the my Sunday, Sunday post above for the latest on Booman.
Steve
I wasn’t actually talking about David Byrne’s “music,” per se…it is what it is, and given the vast territory between the most amateurish, totally fucked-up punk bands and the genius of people like Beethoven, Mozart, Stravinsky, Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker, the whole Northern Indian tradition etc., complaining about people’s tastes in music is simply useless. It is what it is, just like the population of the world is what it is. There is no “fixing” it, just acceptance on the highest level along with a good idea of how to defend oneself when push comes to shove.
What I was speaking about was the thought that someone like David Byrne…a totally studio-created musician who can barely play or sing live when you get right down to it…has some kind of tenable position when he complains about the “psychoacoustic trickery” and “music in pill form” that brought his wealth and fame. It’s ludicrous on the face of it. If people get off on hyped-up near amateur bands like the Rolling Stones and The Grateful Dead or even worse, so be it. But when those critters start moaning about the state of music in the world, then it’s about time for some musical Deeefense!
Which is what I did.
Bet on it.
Deeefense.
Nothing more.
Later…
AG
A very nice piece Shaun. Thanks for composing it.
My chiming in here is, initially to join the chorus and agree;
Damn! Doesn’t the music we discover that moves us oh so much, Move us oh SO Damn Much!
…and then join in the wonder and curiosity of just how, why, in the universe this astonishingly powerful event happens?
[Specially considering that many other experiences we creatures have, even other spectacular and/or intense and/or compelling experiences, are not as distinctively astonishingly powerful.
And at the moment, and just off the top of my sleepy head, I’m thinking few other non-music spectacular/intense/compelling experiences are so consistent and reliable at Moving us So Damn Much!]
I am not primarily a neuroscientist.
I am secondarily a neuroscientist, in the course of my primary avocation as a physician engaged in treating people suffering chronic pain.
Both the personal as well as the academic base that birthed my avocation had its roots in physiological psychology and molecular biology. The academic; my undergraduate years, the personal; more to do with the Grateful Dead, the Allman Brothers Live At Fillmore East, and such, as well as the physiologic and molecular biologic accoutrement of the times.
All playing a part in my effort to shine a little more light on:
Why am I thinking [X]? …Why am I thinking anything? …Where the heck am I …and why am I even wondering about any of these things? I’m pretty confidant the reason I’m laughing is because it really is pretty funny – I think. I’d like to be in on this. So, what is all this anyway?
Shaun, you’ve posed a compelling question about a compelling phenomena, and you’ve looked to see what neuroscience has to say about it, but I think the neuroscience you have come upon so far has ‘missed the boat’.
First lets call the compelling phenomena what it is: it is an experience.
We could say it is our mind having an experience, we could say its an experience ‘having’ our mind.
[…there are quite a number of discussions which can take off from that right there, asking if ‘we could say it this way, or we could say it that way’ is synonymous or a dichotomy “Mommy, are people conservatives because they found stuff to be afraid of, or are they afraid of stuff so they become conservatives?”…
In this particular rambling, ‘Well Rose, it doesn’t matter. let’s just keep going down this road.’ (with apologies) -]
Point is, we’ve got music, and we’ve got someone listening; Shaun, Brendan, Tarheeldem, me, …maybe not Mr Gilroy, at the moment anyway –
– and then this thing happens: a spectacular/intense/compelling experience. An experience so profoundly moving that, compared to a lot of other experiences, it is so astounding, that Shaun, you’re compelled to ask – WHY?
Great question.
But the answer you’ve gotten from neuroscience does not answer your question. It does not pull back a curtain and give us something profound. It does not answer – WHY?
Here neuroscience is answering a much smaller, albeit interesting question; it is addressing the question: HOW?
Compelling experiences: being transported by music, being afraid, having a broken heart, chronic pain, grief – as well as more modest experiences: I don’t like this show. I’m too hot, I should’ve worn less clothing. I’ve already poured the cereal into a bowl and now I find we’re out of milk…. To have the experience, to have that ‘state of mind’ be the particular reality we experience, we seem to require neurotransmitters; Dopamine, Serotonin, etc, doing some transmitting along some networks. The neurotransmitters, doing what they do, is HOW we have the experience happen.
the WHY of the experience coming into being in the first place…?
Still a great question…
…for brain and mind science to actually answer that, well, like some guy said, “further more it may require a change that has not come before.”
Bidding y’all Goodnight
D.E. nee C. Charlie
To Bad Attitude Arthur:
I didn’t say that I approved of David Byrne. I didn’t say I’d climb into bed with him on a cold winter night. All I said is that he provided some elusive insight, whether it comes from Bob Dorough, Phil Woods, George Thorogood, Jerome Garcia or Frank Lamagna, all of whom I have been fortunate to know and learn from.
I’ll take the insight where I can find it regardless of whether some grouchy guy wants to thump his chest and bigfoot all over it.
But in his case the “insight” is not only elusive, it also hasn’t been earned. (See my post in response to Steven D above.)
I really don’t care what you or anyone else listens to. That subject is well above my pay grade…or maybe well below it, I’m never quite sure. I was responding to the idea that David Byrne has the temerity to complain about the very things that allowed him to become a multi-milionaire, that’s all.
AG
P.S. You hangin’ with Phil and Bob? You must frequent The Deerhead Inn. Next time you drop in on a Monday night to hear the C.O.T.A Band (Phil’s band, and Bob is almost always singing with it.), email me.(My email address is in my profile.) I play with the band whenever it’s there and I’m not working in NYC. If I’m going to be there I’ll tell you (Arthur Gilroy is my pen name), and if you guess which one I am there’s a free drink or two in the works for you.
Bet on it.
I appreciate music. However, I appreciate it partly because I am an amateur musician. I sing, I play the harp (harmonica), I have a pedal steel in the closet which I cannot play, I can play almost any brass instrument (except the trombone). The ability to play and the interest in playing is a key part of my appreciation.
I’m getting ready for choir. If you can’t play something, you can sing. Most people think they cannot sing, and some cannot. However, what most people need is a little choir practice. There are only a few people with a natural genius talent in music, and even they must practice to improve. The difference between a genius and a normal person is that the genius practices all the time.
I spent many decades feeling sad because I was a bad practicer and would never be a good musician, regardless of whether I managed to do anything right in “real” life. Then it finally came to me (when my kids were in Suzuki programs and of course not practicing) all that had prepared me to be a really good listener. And musicians need us.
I am a musician and have noticed the same thing, in that often musos can play but not listen, and some non-musos can really listen without playing.
Neuroscience tells us that most listeners process audio through their right hemisphere, while musos use both hemispheres, as we tend to look for the architectural qualities, to learn from that to grow more as musicians.
In the beginning was the word… then the light.
When we enter a room the music enters us before we can cerebralize our reactions, like a perfume.
It is also proved to help us organize our cognition.
Dopamine, Shopamine, I don’t know what is happening on chemical/electricical levels, I do know that music exerts a spell more powerful than any other, and provides succor to more people than any other medicine, helping us open doors to freedom inside their being, the wings to fly above temporary adversity to a better spiritual place, and return blessed and strengthened.
It is the biggest mystery in the universe, and when I sit down at my piano I feel like Galileo about to peer for new cosmic wonders through his telescope. It’s a journey, every step closer to some invisible goal, to go just a little bit deeper than yesterday into the world that are there to be explored.
Thanks for this diary, it captures some of the magic, as do the comments.
David Byrne has a great blog, and writes very well about his life as an all-round art freak.
I enjoy his quirky take on things!
This was really great, shaun!