Hi all:
First, I think that the only real music is live music, and recordings are simply snapshots of that moment, not ‘the right way’ to play something. There are as many interpretations of a tune as there are musicians who play it; each of us hears a tune in a different way, and to me that’s more than half the beauty of music, particularly Traditional Music. As soon as Tradition becomes rigorously codified it dies, I think.
It’s taken me a long time to realize that slavish imitation of a musical performance will never impress the musician you’re copying, or other musicians. I imagine them standing and listening, knowing that what you’re doing is missing the point, which is essentially that music is an act of creation. Not re-creation (you can never step into the same river twice, after all) but creation, the urge to make something unique, timeless, and purely of the moment.
So recording a live performance in my opinion misleads us into believeing that that musician only ever plays that tune that one way, ‘the right way’ and if they release a different version later leaves us feeling vaguely cheated somehow.
Then the attitude appears that it’s possible to own the music because you’re the one who recorded it (when in fact what you own is the peice of tape, CD or what have you) and not the music, which is essentially something that existed in the past, at the moment of the recording. I guess what I’m trying to say is that (contrary to Intellectual Property laws) you can’t own music, you can only create it, let it go into the world and hope that people liked it enough to give you money for that moment, and hence you have enough money for food, etc.
So when I read about people getting all up in arms about music recorded a hundred years ago played by someone long dead, all I hear is the voice of greed, not music. Supporting either a musician (or the musician’s family) by buying their recordings (or better yet, going to see their show)
is one thing, but claiming that ‘I am the sole dispenser of this and any attempt to do otherwise will get you sued’ is, in my opinion, just plain daft.
How long do you own music for? Ten years, a hundred, a thousand? How about only for the moment I’m playing it?
'K. I’ve babbled enough. Hope noone wants to hit me with anything made out of delrin, or lead.
Mark
edited for stupidity