kimberlysteele: (Default)
[personal profile] kimberlysteele

Music is one of those basic things that ideally should be good for humans. The music that has evolved from the classical versus pop fracture and the music of advertising is not good for humans. If anything, it is anti-human. Marketing jingles and the popular songs that sound like extended versions of them are designed to implant in the brain like parasites. We call them ear worms because they burrow deep into the consciousness and the soft tissues of the brain. Once they are there, their function is to poison by immersion. Instead of being able to hear our own thoughts, we hear the pop song or the jingle’s more direct sales pitch.

Pop songs sell desire, or more specifically dissatisfaction with one’s own appearance and circumstances in order to create desire that makes the host into a good customer intent on collecting all the accoutrements of modern life. Advertising jingles do this in a straightforward way: they plant a catchy tune that lasts far longer than the appeal of the product in question, for instance McDonald’s “duh-dum-duh-duh-duh, I’m lovin’ it”. In the case of longer format jingles, try finding a hip hop song that makes no mention of the accumulation of large amounts of money or contests in which the artist declares themselves superior to others in terms of their sexual appeal.

The hook of any given hip hop tune is designed to convince young people that they need to compete with each other by becoming narcissistic, greedy copies of the artist’s image as presented in the song. In other corners of the pop music world, we find whiny It Girls and It Boys crooning about their broken hearts. The image created in this case is the beautiful martyr who struggles prettily while wearing the latest fashions and taking designer drugs. Once again, the point is to create desire to mate with the star or to be like him or her, constantly advertising one’s status on social media while looking great, of course.

Music is Prayer

Music is and always was a form of prayer. Music is holy and to use it for mass advertising campaigns or by deliberately crafting ear worms to pimp commercialized images defiles it to some degree. This is not to say that all pop songs or even advertising jingles are inherently bad. They’re not. The point is that music has become degraded and debased like many other parts of modern life.

Science has shown that music uses more parts of the brain than any other human activity. Music is a way of accessing parts of the brain and improving them via exercise. Merely listening to music has been shown in studies to improve overall cognition; performing it and improvising it take brainpower to whole new levels of achievement. In other words, music often acts as a highway to the divine.

Nevertheless, not all prayer is good. Prayer is a means of contacting and communicating with incorporeal beings. There are many, many incorporeal beings who are not gods. Praying to them as if they were gods is what most people do, like when I was a child and prayed to the Christian God and Santa Claus at once because I was confused and spiritually illiterate. There are also the ethical issues of praying for someone else, and music can easily become part of that mess. When someone forces you to listen to loud music, whether this is the blaring commercials of a TV program or the twenty-something in his car with a modded out stereo system blasting autotuned swear words to thudding bass, they are attempting to drag you into worshipping what they worship. This practice is not exactly the same praying on someone else’s behalf without their permission, but it is well within the ballpark.

Music is powerful because it is a connecting force or a bridge. Music conjures up a state of mind, for better or for worse. I can no longer bear to watch Midnight Diner, a TV series from Japan that got popularized on Netflix, because of a song played at the beginning and the end of each episode. The song is a plaintive, sad number called Omoide by Tsunekichi Suzuki. I watched the first couple of seasons of Midnight Diner when my cat Kiki was in her last few weeks of life and the song viscerally puts me back in that time. I become overwhelmed with emotion as if I have traveled through time.

Music: The Best Part of Church

Religions have known the power of music for a very long time. Many Christmas songs are Gregorian chants that have been with us since the Dark Ages. The Hagia Sophia, built over 1500 years ago in the city of Istanbul, was clearly designed at least partially to provide beautiful acoustics for singers and perhaps instrumentalists of old.

Music creates structures within the imagination. The imagination is one and the same as the astral plane. I have a peculiar predisposition to synesthesia, or “seeing” sounds and music in my imagination as a series of colorful lines and shapes. The truly odd part is that I believe I can teach other people to be synesthetes and that becoming a synesthete helps singers especially to improve their vocals. Visualizing a pitch as a color makes me far more likely to hit the pitch accurately, especially if it is extra high or low or embedded in a difficult passage of music. When I tell my voice students to do the same, it works like a charm. It is as if the structure of the music exists on a plane other than the one where the sound is heard and that by paying attention to it (by colorizing it within the imagination) we can capture it and hit it like an expert marksman shooting a target.

When I listen to music, I see all sorts of artistic representations of it in my mind’s eye. If the music is crap, such as a commercial jingle, a pop song, or any form of atonalism, it is extra irritating. The shapes are ugly and they linger for a long time as earworms. It is for this reason I rarely attend concerts, and that includes “classical” music concerts. Much of classical music is garbage, especially when listened to as recordings. Mozart, in my opinion, was nowhere near as perfect as his fans presume. I find that much of his music, especially from his early periods, is trite and syrupy. When I listen to music, it is well-chosen and curated. Beautiful music creates kaleidoscopes of color, pattern, and structure and uplifts my imagination often for days afterward.

When a Bach chorale is sung inside a church, it creates a structure within a structure. Astral structures are amplified and reflected by similar astral structures, but can also be affected by physical/etheric structures. Beautiful churches attract and amplify symmetrical, beautiful, harmonious energies. Ugly churches do the opposite. Most religious buildings in the US are hideously ugly and badly designed, so often the music is the only thing redeeming the structure of the building. When a psychically sensitive person walks into such a religious building, he or she will often be deluged by the conflicting and dissonant currents of astral energy pervading the building, not the least of which come from the parishioners and clergy themselves.

If occultism is to experience a renaissance, I believe it will happen largely because of a resurgence of folk music and the study of astral shapes. There isn't much I can do to affect an entire musical and magical renaissance as an individual. Nevertheless, I can at least attempt to play my part (ha ha) by performing and in my case, writing religious music and by teaching others to recognize a musical shape when they see it in their mind's eye.



Date: 2022-09-21 08:11 pm (UTC)
methylethyl: (Default)
From: [personal profile] methylethyl
This was one of the things that was so heartbreaking about both my childhood Presbyterian churches, as well as the Catholic church, all deciding to "modernize" their music into catchy dumbed-down tunes that didn't require anyone to be able to read music. They found the most *alive* part of the liturgy, and they killed it. There should be trials and sentences for that.

In both the RC and Orthodox churches, any time you bring together the traditional chant, and traditional church architecture, you are *playing the building* as a musical instrument. All those apses and domes and things aren't just bits of old-school engineering. They're soundboxes. Traditionally, in a cross-shaped church, you'd have two choirs, one in the left arm of the cross, and one in the right, responding to each other, waking up the walls and arches and apses and domes and making them ring with sound. The reason all forms of chant have a basic form of *phrase* *pause* *phrase* *pause* is to allow for the "hang time" of all those echoes working their way around the architecture.

There are some really terrible and costly modern architectural experiments that... oof. I have heard rumors of an Orthodox church somewhere up north, built as a simple circle, under a huge dome. The acoustics are nightmarish.

Best of luck with the piano lessons! Now that we've got decent bandwidth, I'm thinking of adopting a lonely piano for the use of my most musically-inclined kiddo. It seems like all the beginner stuff can be got through online for free, and once you've got through that, then you know if lessons are worthwhile ;)

Re: Christian Rock

Date: 2022-09-22 07:36 pm (UTC)
methylethyl: (Default)
From: [personal profile] methylethyl
I have actually seen more than one piano for sale in a thrift store for under $200 in the last month, so... as you say, it's just a matter of having someone to help load/unload, and then tune the thing. I'm also keeping an eye out for the electric piano type keyboards-- they seem good enough, as a starter thing, and don't take up as much space. He's currently playing violin, and doing reasonably well, so no rush.

I didn't even go to one of the rock and roll churches--- that'd be hard to stomach. But I remember being a little kid and my favorite parts of both mass and the protestant services were the bits where the whole congregation would recite the creed or the responses together: a great rumble of sound that you could almost float on. Neither church had a choir worth mentioning, so I can see how the dumb-ification of the music happened--- I mean, could "Shine, Jesus, Shine" (hork hork hork! Sorry, hairball) ever have gained a foothold in a congregation where the majority of people were still even halfway musically literate? No. Anything you can imagine as a feature of a "KIDZ BOP 27" album, sung by a slurry of high-pitched, overproduced children's voices, to a catchy beat... does not belong in church.

(grump grump grump)

Perfect acoustics for an auditorium are, of course, different from church acoustics-- in an auditorium it's best to avoid echoes and things-- you want sound projected, but not much reflected. There, you'd want the lapse time (how long the sound bounces around the walls and ceilings) to be pretty short. In a cathedral or basilica, it can be pretty long-- but it's an instrument to be played! A good chant harmonizes with its own echoes.

I remember hearing an interview once with a flautist who had made a recording in the Taj Mahal, which has a lapse time of something like *three minutes*, which is insane. It was a delightful thing to listen to. I think it was this guy:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_GXcr_Me7yI

Not too long ago, some bright Orthodox musician managed to get permission to record the echoes inside Hagia Sophia-- it was complicated, as singing is not permitted there. Too politically loaded. They set up several microphones, and recorded a baloon popping. From that they did a sort of digital acoustic reconstruction and made a few Byzantine chant recordings of what it should sound like, if you could chant in Hagia Sophia. They're pretty cool, too:

https://www.openculture.com/2020/03/hear-the-sound-of-the-hagia-sophia-recreated-in-authentic-byzantine-chant.html

Re: Christian Rock

Date: 2022-09-23 02:44 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
It is hard to understate how much it galls the Orthodox, that our most magnificent shrine is held captive by such joyless people.

Date: 2022-09-21 09:59 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Thank you for this Kimberly, and I will certainly check out your music lessons!

I'm actually far more of a visual person than an auditory one, and am not great at music generally (I've tried to play several instruments with very limited success) but I'm extremely sensitive to sound. Even distant or quiet noises can really bug me, as does unwanted music. If I have music on, it's because I want it on, rather than the background noise that many people have the radio on for. Equally,a lot of people have the TV just 'on' in the background, and both appliances feel like they are filling a house with astral trash. (With the possible exception of the UK radio station Classic FM, which mostly plays classical music and some less-abrasive adverts. The internet radio station Venice Classica is also good.)

You may or may not be aware that in engineering, sharp angles are stress raisers (so a smooth curve is much better for distributing weight than a 90° angle, and the latter is more likely to lead to failure of the item). I think the same is true of music. A lot of modern music I can only describe as 'spiky', with sudden changes in volume, pitch and tempo, and synthesised discordant sounds, and has the same effect of increasing stress in humans. In many cases, I think this is by design.

I have found that an extremely good method of blocking out unwanted earworms though is to replace them with something nicer. My preferred option is Pachelbel's canon in D, as a) it's relatively simple, and so I can remember it easily, b) it repeats easily, so I can carry it on as long as necessary c) I got married to it (as have a lot of people, I'm sure), so it has a special emotional aspect and puts me in a calm, mellow frame of mind.

I think I mentioned in passing that I have a tendency to unintentionally broadcast thoughts and emotions, which I am aware would probably sound crazy to most people, but it does seem to be true for me. Anyway, it can be a bit of a pain if someone you don't like realises that you don't like them, so I just use the same tune in my head and it seems to jam the signal. Weird, I know.

I also used to really like the music of Lana Del Rey, but I noticed it had a powerfully addictive hold on me - the songs would just go over and over in my head for days. I never found the singer herself attractive, but her music really was like a siren song to me, I couldn't stop listening - as in, the same song 7 or more times in a row. I later came to realise it was responsible for about 5 years of vague suicide ideation in the back of my head, so I deleted it all. Creepy, dangerous music in my opinion. I've since read that she has some super obsessive fans and got deeply into cursing in the Trump years, so I think I chose the right time (2016) to get rid. Interestingly, after I took up banishing, I found an old CD by her which I still had, and it now has no effect on me - I don't hate it, I don't like it, I don't find it of any interest any more, it's just kind of boring. That in itself is pretty telling.

With regards to holy music as well, I couldn't agree more. The older Christian hymns are amazing to listen to (or to sing with), and there is a warmness, richness and power to them, even if the congregation are tone deaf, mostly over 70 and number in the low tens in a local village hall! The modern ones though - mostly atonal, soulless, bland, derivative and forgettable. If the former is like tasting honey, the latter is like tasting wallpaper paste.

Even though I'm not much of a singer, I actually used to sing in a large (non-religious) choir, but slowly drifted out of it, as for some reason they started only singing musical theatre and Disney songs, and it was just awful. Terrible lyrics badly placed onto dismal tunes. Singing them each week started to feel like a struggle session, where I was being forced to say things I didn't agree with and actively disliked. Ugh.

Anyway, I will dust off (literally) the piano and try to join you from the garden shed on Thursday!

Mr. Crow

Date: 2022-09-22 10:04 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Yeah, I think it's the music production and autotune which makes modern pop music quite so annoying. Lady Gaga used to have a similar effect on me to Lana Del Rey (weirdly addictive) and I recently listened to some of her songs I used to like (from about 10 years ago) and thought a) this is awful and b) there is a weird sound that often repeats on several of the tracks. It's not the same one on each song, but for example, on Bad Romance, there is a strange little "duh-duh-duhduh" at the end of each line. Once you hear it, you can't stop hearing it and it's extremely annoying, but I'd never noticed it before. I don't know why it's there, but it's definitely deliberate, and I get the feeling it's not for benign reasons. I read a little while ago that pop songs have been deliberately tuned for phone speakers nowadays as well, which is why they are really heavy on the very grating treble tones. But yeah, sweary songs I find really jarring too, especially when it's otherwise quite nice and you don't expect it. It's like finding half an (ear)worm in your apple.

Yeah, music seems to work in jamming thought broadcasts because there's no words or intent behind it, as thinking of a single word or shape also seems to work to prevent what you're *actually* thinking from slipping out, but at the risk of broadcasting that item instead. I actually used to find it kind of fun to to make my housemates do things like pick up the milk instead of the tomato sauce from the fridge by repeatedly picturing a jug of milk and thinking of the word, then they would shake their head in confusion and put it back, but, as a previous post of yours said, I Don't Do That Any More, and those kind of parlour tricks stop being fun past the age of about 22. I've had some success mentally picturing a radio antenna dish being retracted or imagining a glowing golden shield around me to prevent thought broadcasts as well.

From reading about the history of the Baroque period, it developed out of deep logic and mathematical complexity (including the name itself), and was intended to inspire a sense of wonder, beauty and awe, so I would guess that's why a certain class of unpleasant creatures abhor it and why it's particularly good at chasing away low-quality earworms.

And ugh, I know, such clumsy lyrics. I'm somewhat ashamed to say I used to like that song. There is also a line about channelling angels in, which the purely materialistic younger Mr. Crow took as a metaphor,but now I'm not so sure... She uses the same words and phrases in a lot of her songs too - I don't know if it's just crappy, lazy songwriting, or some kind of mental programming/dog whistle phrases.

Looking forward the livestream! I have just realised it's at about half past midnight in my time zone though - if I don't stay up, will you upload the recordings too?

Mr. Crow

Date: 2022-09-22 01:49 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Funnily enough, I was planning to look into getting singing lessons in the next few days, so I think I'll consider this a synchronicity.

Date: 2022-09-26 12:36 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Fascinating, thank you for giving me some words to put to my mostly intuitive process of what I think might be grieving, that I’ve been going through in recent years. I grew up in a Lutheran church and nothing gets to me quite like a pipe organ, or hymns in four-part harmony. But I can’t seem to find a church that offers anything like that anymore. It’s guitars (or worse, just a cheesy recording) for accompaniment and power-point lyrics on the wall. Blech.

Date: 2022-09-27 03:49 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Tell me about it. Watched the same thing in my childhood church: went from perfectly decent hymns sung with a piano or organ, to religious-themed karaoke, in the space of a couple years. Thirty years later, I still don't understand how, or why, it happened. But if, as some claim, it was the "leading of the Spirit", then I have grave concerns about the identity of that spirit.

Profile

kimberlysteele: (Default)
Kimberly Steele

June 2025

S M T W T F S
1 23456 7
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 7th, 2025 08:20 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios