Counting down the top 10 most-viewed posts of 2023...here's #4, a Q&A with Ted Gioia first posted on Dec. 12, 2019.
Q&A with Ted Gioia
Ted Gioia is the author of the new book Music: A Subversive History. His other books include How to Listen to Jazz and Love Songs: The Hidden History. A music historian, critic, and performer, his work has appeared in a variety of publications, including The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times.
Q:
You write, "This work has been in the making since the early 1990s, and it
all started when I asked a simple question that led to some very complicated
outcomes: How does music change people's lives?" What was the journey
between that idea and this eventual book?
A:
We are taught nowadays to view music as mere entertainment—a kind of diversion for
our leisure hours.
Ivy
League professor Steven Pinker has even described music as “auditory
cheesecake.” He believes that the only purpose of a song is to stimulate the
brain, and listening to music is no different from drinking a martini or using
recreational drugs.
When
I started the research for this book, more than 25 years ago, I had a very
different view about music. I believed music is a source of transformation and
enchantment in human life. It’s a change agent that possesses great power—over
our bodies, over our communities, over our society as a whole.
I
wanted to write the history of music from this perspective. I wanted to show
how music has transformed the world around us.
This
required a different kind of research.
The stories I wanted to tell don’t usually show up in music history
books. Instead I had to dig into a range of different sources—from scientific
literature to folklore and mythology, and everything in-between.
And
the more I dug into these alternative sources, the more interesting the story
became. Even I had underestimated the power of music in human life.
In
my book, I show that music has been a major force in expanding human freedom
and personal autonomy. And this has been true for centuries.
The
very first songs of personal expression, back in ancient Egypt, were linked to
the earliest labor strikes. In modern times, almost every transformative
movement—whether Stonewall or the Summer of Love or punk rebellion—has been
closely linked to music.
In
just the last few weeks, I have seen protesters in Hong Kong use a Broadway
musical song to confront the government, and activists in Lebanon have turned
the “Baby Shark Song” into a protest anthem.
Maybe
the music industry thinks that songs are just entertainment, but governments
know that music possesses tremendous power. That’s why they repeatedly try to
censor and control it.
Q:
In a Washington Post review of the book, Michael Dirda writes, "For Gioia
the music that truly matters is the kind that upsets Mom and Dad — and it
almost always emerges from the dispossessed." Do you agree with his
assessment, and if so, why do you see that as the music that truly matters?
A:
As a parent myself, I am sometimes on the side of Mom and Dad. But I do
recognize that music possesses power, and that power can be used for either
good or bad.
Just
in the last few decades, we have learned so much about how music impacts our
bodies. Our brainwaves adapt to the rhythms of music. Our blood cell count
changes when we hear music, and our immune system is strengthened.
When
we are exposed to music, our body produces the hormone oxytocin, and this bonds
us together with the people around us. This bonding can lead to a romantic
encounter, or it also might bring together soldiers on the battlefield.
It’s
not a coincidence that almost every violent gang has its own favorite theme
songs. Even Charles Manson used a Beatles song, “Helter Skelter,” as his
anthem.
So
we can’t be indifferent to our musical culture. Music is like nuclear energy.
It has the potential to give illumination to an entire nation, or it might blow
up everything too.
Q:
What surprised you most in the course of your research for the book?
A:
I was most surprised how the same patterns recur again and again in music
history.
For
example, the oldest songs we know about were used in ancient fertility rites,
and are all about sex. Today, you hear very similar songs on the radio. A
researcher even did a statistical analysis and showed that 93 percent of hit
songs today refer to sex.
Madonna
and Lady Gaga have a lot in common with the high priestesses of ancient
Mesopotamia, who gave us the earliest songs documented in the historical
records.
Q:
How is your book "subversive" as compared to other works of music
history?
A:
So much of the music establishment wants to be respectable. But the real
history of music is filled with shameful and embarrassing ingredients. When you
remove these shameful parts, you get rid of the sources of innovation in human
music-making.
In
my book, I show how new ways of singing have been linked repeatedly with sex,
violence, magic, supernatural beliefs, altered mind states, trance and ecstasy,
generational conflict and social upheavals. These are precisely the ingredients
that respectable music history books prefer to leave out.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
Because I am a music historian, people expect me to be focused on the past. But
I am even more concerned about the future of music.
One
of the goals of my new book is to show how a better understanding of the past
can help us create a healthier music ecosystem in the 21st century. That will
be a major focus of my research and writing going forward.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
I believe that music is a leading indicator—not much different from those
economists use to forecast the future. All the great social changes are first
announced in music. So the best way of anticipating what will happen in the
coming years is by listening to the songs that are going viral today.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
No comments:
Post a Comment