Something
similar happens when I listen to the right sort of music, usually instrumental –
Ravel, Saint-Saëns, Copland, Warne Marsh, Bill Evans. The music takes me to
another place, parallel to and overlapping the one I already inhabit. If I’m
uninterrupted and, usually, alone, the sensation recalls the more pleasant experiences
I had with psychedelics. I’m not encouraging anyone to drop acid – it’s a fairly
stupid thing to do – and acid rock and related musical genres never had such an
impact on me. It tends to be quieter, slower tempo music, often in a minor key,
though not always, that best triggers reveries. Nor can I hope to induce them.
They just have to happen, unsought. I ought to add that I’m not a musician and
that there’s no human capacity I so envy as musical composition and performance.
The prolific
and still under-recognized American composer Alec Wilder (1907-1980) is a reliable
source of diurnal visions. Take his Octets, thirty-nine short pieces, most of
which were recorded in 1939. They are whimsical, catchy and tough to categorize
– woodwinds and harpsicord. Jazz? Classical? Pop? Try "Her Old Man was Suspicious." Or a more decidedly classical piece – “Sonata No. 1 for Horn and Piano.” Wilder
loves melody, listeners new to his work will be happy to hear. And he wrote
songs, some of which have become standards: "I'll Be Around" as performed by
Wilder’s friend Frank Sinatra.
Much of
Tuesday was spent in waiting rooms. For accompaniment I brought along Wilder’s Letters I Never Mailed: Clues to a Life.
It was first published in 1975, and I have the newer, annotated edition brought
out in 2005 by the University of Rochester Press. In the first edition, Wilder’s
addressees were often left unidentified or given pseudonyms. In the new one,
David Demsey, the editor, fills in many of the blanks. I ordered but haven’t
yet read Joseph Epstein’s latest book, Charm:
The Elusive Enchantment. Wilder, as writer and composer, embodies charm,
today a rare quality. In one of the letters to his friend Harry Bouras, Wilder
gives a protracted apologia for his music. Here’s an excerpt:
“I am not
against experiment. I am against moving out of the sacred grove of art into the
anarchistic playpen of newness and nowness for their own sakes.
“I believe
in direction, continuity, shape, communication, wit, sophistication,
simplicity, order, honesty and taste.”
2 comments:
Hope you're familiar with Wilder's Did You Ever Cross Over to Sneeden's?.
I love that you included Warne Marsh in this posting. He fits.
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